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Joe Camp Professor of Veterinary Parasitology Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine. Nematodes. Vary in size from microscopic to the vary large (> 1m). Elongate, worm-like, and taper at both ends.
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Joe Camp Professor of Veterinary Parasitology Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine
Vary in size from microscopic to the vary large (> 1m). • Elongate, worm-like, and taper at both ends. • Numerous surface modifications exist, such as; alae, ridges, warts, anterior bulb, or shield-like collar around mouth.
Nematodes undergo incremental growth punctuated by molts of the cuticle. Usually 4 larval stages and variations among parasites as to which is the infective stage. Egg Adult(L5) L1 L4 L2 L3 Generic Life Cycle
Toxocara canis • Found in dogs and wild canids. • ZOONOTIC disease (VLM and OLM) • Transmission to canines during life cycle occurs by several methods: • Direct • Transplacental* • Transmammary • Paratenic Host
Clinical Disease: Dull hair coat, abdominal distention (pot belly), poor appetite, loose stool, intestinal obstruction, pneumonia
Subspherical Yellow-brown One cell stage takes up most of the egg. Egg description 72 - 91 m X 63 - 79 m Thick shell, coarsely pitted Coarse pitting
Toxocara cati • Found in cats. • Also, ZOONOTIC. • Similar transmission methods to Toxocara canis, except: • No transplacental transmission • No transmammary transmission in naturally infected queens • Similar clinical disease as Toxocara canis.
Fine pitting Egg description • Similar to T. canis except smaller (64 - 88 m X 53 - 73 m). • Finely pitted surface.
Toxascaris leonina • Dogs, cats, foxes, wolves. • Life cycle uses: • Direct Transmission • Paratenic Host Transmission • Eggs develop very quickly in the environment (3-6 days). • Clinical disease rarely observed.
Lipid fibrils Egg description • 75-85 X 60-75 m • Colorless • Oval with a smooth, thick shell • Fine fibrils (lipid layer) on inside of shell
T. cati T. canis T. leonina
Baylisascaris procyonis • Raccoons; sometimes dogs. • ZOONOTIC!!!! • Direct development in small intestine of adults (no migration). • Transmission methods: • Direct (Juveniles) • Paratenic Hosts (Adults) • Generally, no clinical signs of disease in raccoons.
Golden brown • Thick shell with finely granular surface. Egg description • 63-88 X 53-68 m • Ellipsoidal
Important Points to Remember • Has affected over 100 species of animals, including humans. • Eggs infective within 30 days of being passed in feces. • Pet raccoons or those kept in confinement pose an increased risk of exposure due to concentration of feces and eggs in an area. • Raccoons usually do not show clinical signs. • Must perform routine fecal examinations and periodic deworming to reduce parasite contamination. • Do not use raccoon enclosures for other animals unless they have been decontaminated. • Avoid all contaminated areas unless treated.
Larva Migrans • Visceral Larva Migrans (VLM) • Larvae migrating through liver and lungs resulting in fever, hepatomegaly, pneumonia, etc. • Ocular Larva Migrans (OLM) • Unilateral ocular disease • Neural Larva Migrans (NLM) • Migration of larvae and larval growth in the brain and spinal cord.
Ascarid Treatment • Approved products for dogs (T. canis and T. leonina) • Milbemycin oxime • Moxidectin • Pyrantel pamoate • Fenbendazole • Piperazine (may have lower efficacy) • Monthly heartworm preventives • Milbemycin oxime or ivermectin plus pyrantel • Febantel in combination with pyrantel and praziquantel • Pyrantel in combination with ivermectin and praziquantel
Ascarid Treatment • Arrested larvae difficult to kill with current anthelmintics. • Perform strategic deworming protocols (CAPC Guidelines) to prevent transplacental and transmammary transmission. • Must also treat bitch since she may re-infect herself by ingesting infective larvae from pup’s feces.
Ascarid Treatment • Approved products for cats (T. cati and T. leonina) • Milbemycin oxime • Moxidectin • Pyrantel pamoate • Fenbendazole • Piperazine (may have lower efficacy) • Selamectin (T. cationly) • Emodepside (T. cati only)
Ascarid Treatment • Baylisascaris procyonis • Most of the products that remove adult Toxocara canis from dogs will remove adult B. procyonis although no products are approved for that specific use.
Small Animal Parasite Control • Ascarid eggs are resistant to most environmental conditions and will remain infective for many, many years. • Steps to “clean up” environment include: • Entomb with concrete or remove top 6 inches of soil. • Kennels thoroughly cleaned of organic debris. • Decontaminate with 1% bleach solution (will not kill eggs). • Hot, boiling water to spot clean. • Flaming with propane torch.
Ascarid Prepatent Periods • T. canis • Direct transmission, pups < 3 mos. of age; tracheal migration- 4 – 5 weeks • Transplacental transmission, following tracheal migration- 3 – 4 weeks after pup is born • Transmammary transmission- 2 – 3 weeks after pup is born • Paratenic host transmission- 2 – 3 weeks • T. cati • Direct transmission- ~ 8 weeks • Paratenic host transmission- ~ 3 weeks • T. leonina • Direct transmission- ~ 10.5 weeks • B. procyonis • Direct transmission in young raccoons- 50 – 76 days • Paratenic host transmission in adult raccoons- 32 – 38 days
We would like to acknowledge Elanco for their sponsorship in support of course development.