Veterinary Sciences (Oct 2021)

Assessing the Efficacy of Albendazole against <em>Fasciola hepatica</em> in Naturally Infected Cattle by In Vivo and In Vitro Methods

  • Michal Babják,
  • Alžbeta Königová,
  • Ľudmila Burcáková,
  • Michaela Komáromyová,
  • Michaela Urda Dolinská,
  • Marián Várady

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci8110249
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 249

Abstract

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This study was performed on a cattle farm with a long-term use of albendazole (ABZ) and a permanent history of fasciolosis for comparing in vivo and in vitro methods for the detection of anthelmintic resistance and drug efficacy. A selected group of 10 Charolais cows was treated in autumn 2020 with ABZ at a dose of 7.5 mg/kg body weight. Another group of 10 cows remained untreated as a control. The faecal egg count reduction test was used to determine in vivo efficacy. The percentage reduction of eggs on day 14 after treatment ranged from 77 to 81.8%, depending on the formula used for calculation. The in vitro egg hatch test (EHT) was used as a second diagnostic method. F. hepatica eggs for the EHT were isolated from faecal samples. The test was performed in two versions differing in the length of incubation with ABZ (12 h and 15 d). The percentage of eggs with inhibited development at a concentration of 0.5 μM in both versions of the EHT agreed with the in vivo results. Ovicidal activity at a concentration of 0.5 μM in the 12-h version suggested a reduced efficacy of ABZ (65.40%). An EHT prepared using pooled faecal samples was a prospective method for the detection of efficacy and ABZ resistance in F. hepatica.

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