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CES Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia

On-line version ISSN 1900-9607

Abstract

VILLAR, David et al. Haemonchosis in a Brahman calf in the high tropics of the Antioquian Northeast. Ces. Med. Vet. Zootec. [online]. 2018, vol.13, n.2, pp.173-183. ISSN 1900-9607.  https://doi.org/10.21615/cesmvz.13.2.6.

Haemonchosis is a parasitic disease that in cattle, unlike small ruminants, rarely causes mortality. However, parasitic burdens that are usually subclinical in well-fed calves may become clinical causing death when body condition is poor. This report describes a case of fatal haemonchosis in a 7-month-old Brahman calf and the results of treatment with albendazole (10 mg/kg PO) in 17 cohort calves. The farm, dedicated to breeding and rearing beef calves, was located in the high tropics of the Andes, municipality of Yarumal (Antioquia), at 2,353 meters of altitude with an annual mean temperature of 14 °C. Apart from vaccination for foot and mouth disease, the animals are not subjected to any other treatments. The diagnosis was initially suspected based on clinico-pathological observations of a severe anemia with hypoproteinemia of non-inflammatory etiology, and was confirmed in the postmortem examination by the presence of hundreds of adult nematodes of Haemonchus spp. in the abomasum and a count of 19,200 eggs per gram of feces (EPG) of trichostrongylids. Stool culture showed that 70, 20, and 10% of these eggs belonged to Haemonchus, Coperia and other nematode genera, respectively. Albendazole treatment was effective in reducing parasitic loads in 17 treated calves from moderate (200-700 OPG) and high levels (> 700 EPG) to low levels (16-100 EPG). The infection was completely eliminated in half of the treated animals and was reduced to below 90% in only 3 animals. Because the mean egg reduction percentage was 95%, it can be inferred that there is no resistance to albendazole. In conclusion, this case reveals that haemonchosis should be included in the differential diagnosis of mortality in calves in the Colombian tropics, and that necropsies and periodic coprological examinations are necessary to establish preventive and control measures of this parasitosis.

Keywords : Albendazole; anemia; cattle; Haemonchus spp.

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