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Efficiency comparison of experimental fosfatriclaben with three commercial fasciolicides in experimentally infected sheep

Authors :
Rosa María Elena Arias-García
Miguel Flores-Ramos
Froylán Ibarra-Velarde
Yolanda Vera-Montenegro
Alicia Hernández-Campos
Rafael Castillo
Source :
Parasitology Research. 119:2687-2693
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

In this work, we compare and evaluate the efficiency of fosfatriclaben with three commercial fasciolicides in experimentally infected sheep. Fosfatriclaben is a novel prodrug derived from triclabendazole; it is highly water-soluble with excellent aqueous stability at pH 7, properties that make it ideal for developing intramuscular pharmaceutical compositions in the form of solutions. In order to compare, 30 mixed breed sheep, previously diagnosed negative to fluke eggs, were infected with 200 metacercariae of Fasciola hepatica, twice. Five groups of six animals/each were formed for treatments. Group 1 (G1) was treated with closantel 5% injectable at 5 mg/kg subcutaneously, G2 with clorsulon at 2 mg/kg subcutaneously, G3 with triclabendazole at 12 mg/kg per os, G4 with fosfatriclaben at 6 mg/kg intramuscularly (dose equivalent to triclabendazole content), and G5 remained as the non-treated control. On day 110, fecal samples were examined to determine the percentage of egg reduction after treatment, and sheep were humanely euthanized. The livers were collected, the flukes were extracted, measured, and counted. Efficiency in egg reduction was of 86.8, 90.5, 98.4, and 97.3% for closantel, clorsulon, triclabendazole, and fosfatriclaben, respectively, and efficiency against flukes was of 96.2, 91.9, 99.4, and 95.7%, respectively. No statistical differences were found between treatments. It is concluded that fosfatriclaben at 6 mg/kg intramuscularly presented a high fasciolicide efficiency, similar to the best commercial fasciolicides, having advantage over its predecessor since it uses half of the dose required by triclabendazole to remove flukes in sheep under study.

Details

ISSN :
14321955 and 09320113
Volume :
119
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Parasitology Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....221b76e177a90eafbb9734c4f66eacf8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00436-020-06705-4