Equine Ascarid Clinical Pathology
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Uploaded by BonnyStatueOfLiberty8607
Colorado Mountain College
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Summary
This document provides a clinical pathology lecture on the equine ascarid. It covers the life cycle, pathology, signs, diagnosis, and treatment of the parasite. The lecture gives detailed information that is relevant to studying veterinary science.
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CLINICAL PATHOLOGY I – Lecture The Equine Ascarid: The horse has only one Parascaris equorum o Largest equine parasite: Up to 10” long o Direct life cycle o Prepatent period = 3 months o Primarily parasite of nursing and weaned foals < 1 year of age o...
CLINICAL PATHOLOGY I – Lecture The Equine Ascarid: The horse has only one Parascaris equorum o Largest equine parasite: Up to 10” long o Direct life cycle o Prepatent period = 3 months o Primarily parasite of nursing and weaned foals < 1 year of age o Adults live in small intestine o Occupy lots of space in bowel and can cause obstruction leading to rupture o Age-related immunity against P. equorum does develop P. equorum Life Cycle o Highly resistant, sticky eggs passed in feces o Ova become infective in ~ 10 days o Fecal-oral transmission: Infective ova ingested by next DH and hatch in small bowel o Larvae migrate through wall of small intestine and begin tracheal migration o Larvae migrate to liver via portal vein o Larvae then travel via circulation to lungs and cross into alveoli o Larvae crawl (or are coughed) up trachea, swallowed back to small bowel and, following mucosal migration, mature to adults o Prepatent period = 3 months Pathology o Migrating larvae cause tissue damage Inflammatory tracts in liver Inflammatory nodules in lungs o Lesions eventually heal, but reduction in functional capacity (especially lungs) at young age leaves mark Clinical Signs o Prepatent infestation (ascarid larvae): Foals infested at birth may show clinical signs at 4 to 6 weeks of age Cough Nasal discharge “Verminous pneumonia” o Patent infestation (ascarid adults): Diarrhea, flatulence “Poor doer”: Unthrifty; rough hair coat; leathery skin; enlarged abdomen Anorexia Reduced weight gain or actual weight loss Colic Death following impaction and intestinal rupture resulting in fatal peritonitis 12/3/2024 1 Diagnosis o Prepatent infestation “Coughing foal with nasal discharge” Tracheal wash to recover migrating larvae Empirical treatment with anthelmintic and observe for improvement in clinical signs Diagnosis sometimes made at necropsy o Patent infestation Fecal float with characteristic ova Ova sometimes lose thick protective shell during collection and/or processing for fecal flotation o Thick shelled (larger) o Smooth shelled (smaller) These are both Parascaris ova Treatment o Many effective deworming agents available Ivermectin, moxidectin (both effective against P. equorum but shouldn’t be used in foals < 6 months of age) Fenbendazole, oxibendazole Pyrantel (daily in feed after weaning) o Begin treatment at 8 weeks of age; treat at two-month intervals for first year of life Treatment Warning o Administration of anthelmintics that paralyze ascarids (e.g., piperazine, ivermectin, and pyrantel) to foal with heavy infestation of P. equorum adults can cause impaction and/or complete obstruction o Treat during prepatent period OR o Treat with lower dose of BZDs and repeat in 10 to 14 days Prevention is Difficult o Female worms are prolific egg layers -- infested foals may pass millions of eggs daily in feces o Thick-shelled ova resistant to freezing and drying, can survive for long periods (years) o Chemicals do not kill ova o Sticky outer layer ensures eggs present almost everywhere in foal's environment Bedding - Mangers Stall floor and walls - Water buckets Dam’s udder + teats - Pasture o Foals are coprophagic -- seeding cecum and colon with bacteria and protozoa necessary for fermentation o Chemical disinfectants have no appreciable effect on P. equorum ova o High-pressure steam-cleaning will kill ova 12/3/2024 2 o Before foaling Steam-clean foaling stall Wash mare’s udder and teats immediately before parturition Deworm mare day she foals Age-Related Immunity o Infestation rates in foals decline significantly by six months due to Age-related resistance Potent immune response o By 12 months of age, patent infestations in horses relatively uncommon o Immunity usually lasts throughout adult lives 12/3/2024 3