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Treatment and eradication of murine fur mites: I. Toxicologic evaluation of ivermectin-compounded feed.
- Source :
-
Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science : JAALAS [J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci] 2010 Sep; Vol. 49 (5), pp. 564-70. - Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Fur mite outbreaks remain a persistent problem in laboratory mouse colonies. All currently published treatment methods are labor-intensive, expensive, or unreliable. During a recent outbreak with Myobia musculi and Myocoptes musculinus in a large colony (approximately 30,000 cages), we developed a feed-based treatment regime in which ivermectin was the active ingredient. Rodent feed was compounded with 3 different concentrations of ivermectin (12, 24, and 48 ppm) and γ-irradiated. Postcompounding analysis revealed loss of ivermectin during manufacturing, but the remaining drug was stable for at least 6 mo. In an 8-wk toxicity study in a C57BL/6NTac mouse breeding colony, ad-libitum feeding of the 3 diets yielded estimated doses of 1.3, 2.7, and 5.4 mg/kg. Adult mice lacked adverse clinical effects, except that 1 of the 144 mice in the 48-ppm group developed tremors and ataxia and was euthanized. No significant differences between doses were revealed by CBC, serum chemistry, body weight, or gross necropsy. Plasma drug concentrations plateaued at a dose-dependent level 7 to 10 d after initiation of treatment and decreased to undetectable levels 6 to 9 d after its discontinuation. Fertility of the P0 generation was unaffected. Pup mortality was higher in the 24- and 48-ppm groups, reaching 100% at the higher dose. Animals exposed to ivermectin as neonates had normal weaning weights, but mice receiving 24-ppm feed had lower adult weights. Our results indicate that using feed containing 12 ppm ivermectin (estimated ingested dose, 1.3 mg/kg) was safe in a C57BL/6NTac breeding colony.
- Subjects :
- Animals
Antiparasitic Agents blood
Antiparasitic Agents pharmacokinetics
Body Weight drug effects
Female
Hair parasitology
Ivermectin blood
Ivermectin pharmacokinetics
Male
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Mite Infestations drug therapy
Mite Infestations parasitology
Rodent Diseases parasitology
Toxicity Tests veterinary
Antiparasitic Agents adverse effects
Ivermectin adverse effects
Mice parasitology
Mite Infestations veterinary
Mites growth & development
Rodent Diseases drug therapy
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 2769-6677
- Volume :
- 49
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science : JAALAS
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 20858356