Carolina Buzzulini
Sao Paulo State University
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Veterinary Parasitology | 2008
Fernando de Almeida Borges; Heloísa Cristina da Silva; Carolina Buzzulini; Vando Edésio Soares; E. Santos; Gilson Pereira de Oliveira; Alvimar José da Costa
The present work aimed to evaluate the endectocide activity of a new injectable long-action formulation, containing ivermectin (IVM) and abamectin (ABA). In each one of the four experiments performed, the following groups were formed: group I: 2.25% IVM (450 microg/kg)+1.25% ABA (250 microg/kg), group II: 3.15% IVM (630 microg/kg) and group III: control. Eighteen bovine naturally infected by gastrointestinal nematoda were selected for anthelmintic evaluation and necropsied on posttreatment day (PTD) 14 to estimate the total parasitic burden. For the Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus field trial, 30 bovine were selected by means of counts of semi-engorged R. (B.) microplus and the therapeutic and residual efficacy evaluated by tick counts on PTDs 1, 3, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42, 49, 56, 63, 70, 77, 84 and 91. In the stall test, 15 calves were artificially infested with 5000 R. (B.) microplus (Mozzo strain) larvae three times a week and daily collections of all the engorged female ticks detached from each calf were performed until the PTD 80. Forty bovine naturally infected with Dermatobia hominis larvae were selected and the number of larvae was counted by visual and tactile inspection on PTDs 3, 7, 14, 28, 35, 49, 63, 77, 91 and 105. In this trial, a formulation containing 1% doramectin (200 microg/kg) was also used. IVM+ABA formulation and 3.15% IVM eliminated four of the eight species of nematode identified. The anthelmintic efficacy of the avermectins association against Haemonchus placei, Cooperia spatulata and C. punctata was 89.64%, 98.84% and 97.69%, while 3.15% IVM achieved 30.98%, 84.79% and 75.56%, respectively. The two formulations evaluated showed reduced acaricide action on the PTD 1 and 3, reaching high efficacy percentages from PTD 14 onward. The IVM+ABA showed efficacy above 95% in the period between PTDs 21 and 49. In the stall test, it observed no difference (P>0.05) between the two formulations regarding the R. (B.) microplus counts during the entire evaluation period. IVM+ABA reduced the number of ticks from the PTD 1 to 77 (P<0.05) and 3.15% IVM reduced (P<0.05) the tick number from PTD 4 up to PTD 80. The three endectocides showed no difference (P>0.05) regarding the number of D. hominis larvae and prevented this parasite reestablishment until PTD 105. These results indicate that the IVM+ABA association showed higher anthelmintic activity and similar efficacy against arthropods to the formulation containing 3.15% IVM.
Experimental Parasitology | 2013
Welber Daniel Zanetti Lopes; Weslen Fabricio Pires Teixeira; Lucas Vinicius Shigaki de Matos; Gustavo Felippelli; Breno Cayeiro Cruz; Willian Giquelin Maciel; Carolina Buzzulini; Flávia Carolina Fávero; Vando Edésio Soares; Gilson Pereira de Oliveira; Alvimar José da Costa
The present study therefore assessed the deleterious effects of MLs (ivermectin, abamectin, doramectin and moxidectin) on the reproductive parameters of engorged Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus females that naturally detached from experimentally infested cattle in two experiments. The following reproductive parameters of engorged female ticks were analyzed: female weight, egg mass weight, percentage of hatchability, percentage of reduction in oviposition, percentage of reduction in hatchability, reproductive efficiency and percent control/efficacy of formulations with respect to reproductive parameters. In the experiment I, statistical analysis of the data grouped into 5-days intervals revealed that pour-on application of abamectin (500 mcg/kg) had significantly (p ≤ 0.05) reduced engorged female weight, egg mass weight and percent hatchability on days 6-15, 6-20 and 11-20 post-treatment (p. t.) compared to the respective data for detached and pre-selected engorged females in the control group. The abamectin, demonstrated 33.41% of reduction in oviposition, 6.77% in hatchability and abamectin efficacy was of 13.99%. In the experiment II, statistically significant reductions (p ≥ 0.05) were observed in animals treated subcutaneous with ivermectin (630 mcg/kg), doramectin (700 mcg/kg) and moxidectin (1000 mcg/kg) relative to the control for days 6-40, 6-48 and 6-40 p. t., respectively. Ivermectin reduced hatchability only on days 16-20 p. t., whereas doramectin significantly reduced (p ≤ 0.05) hatchability on days 6-10 and 16-35 p. t. For moxidectin, deleterious effects on hatchability were observed on days 16-35 p. t. The percent reductions in oviposition of engorged female ticks were 46.31%, 62.17% and 61.02% with ivermectin, doramectin and moxidectin treatments, respectively. The percent efficacy of the formulations on the reproductive parameters of engorged female ticks was 21.22% for ivermectin, 36.03% for doramectin and 35.45% for moxidectin. Among the MLs assessed, doramectin and moxidectin had the highest acaricidal efficacies and the most deleterious effects on the reproductive parameters of engorged R. (B.) microplus females. However, future studies will be necessary to assess the extent to which these effects, along with acaricidal activity, can be used to control the ectoparasite in cattle.
Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira | 2007
Carolina Buzzulini; Américo Garcia da Silva Sobrinho; Alvimar José da Costa; Thais Rabelo dos Santos; Fernando de Almeida Borges; Vando Edésio Soares
Abstract€–€The€anthelmintic efficacy of 2.0% albendazol, 2.55% levamisol chloridrate and 0.08% ivermectinformulation to 1% moxidectin in sheep naturally infected with gastrointestinal nematodes was compared. Twenty-four animals were selected by faecal egg counts (FEC) means, composing three experimental groups with eightsheep each: T1,€sheep treated with albendazol, levamisol and ivermectin association; T2,€sheep treated with 1%moxidectin and T3,€untreated group. FEC was estimated at 1 st , 3 rd , 5 th and 7 th €day post-treatment. All animals wereslaughtered at 7 th €day post-treatment to quantify and identify the nematode burden. The association was 100%effective against eight of ten helminth species ( Cooperia punctata , C.€pectinata , C.€curticei , C.€spatulata , Strongyloides papillosus , Trichostrongylus axei , Oesophagostomum columbianum and Trichuris ovis ), whilethe moxidectin removed only six of these species. It also had superior efficacy against Haemonchus contortus (93%) when compared to the 1%€moxidectin (51.4%). Both formulations showed similar efficacy against
Revista Brasileira De Zootecnia | 2007
Antonio Carlos Homem Junior; Américo Garcia da Silva Sobrinho; Sandra Mari Yamamoto; Rafael Silvio Bonilha Pinheiro; Carolina Buzzulini; Carolina Spina Alves de Lima
The objective of this trial was to evaluate the compensatory growth and biometrical measurements on lambs feed restricted or ad libitum fed. In the first of two periods of 60 days, 18 7/8 Ile de France x 1/8 Ideal female lambs were assigned to three treatments in a completely randomized design as follows: 1) no feed restriction (ad libitum fed), 2) 30% of feed restriction or 3) 60% of feed restriction calculated as proportion of the ad libitum fed group intake. In the second period, all animals were ad libitum fed. At the end of the first period, lambs with no feed restriction and those with 30% of feed restriction gained 18 and 0.8% of body weight (BW), respectively, compared to their initial weight while lambs with 60% of feed restriction lost 15% of BW. In the second period, BW gain was greatest on animals with 30% of feed restriction (196.24 g/d), lowest on those not feed restricted (116.20 g/d) and intermediate on animals with 60% of feed restriction. Feed conversion was of 10.09 and of 5.97 on lambs not feed restricted and with 30% of feed restriction, respectively. The biometrical measurements were similar at the beginning of the trial but at the end of the first period there were reductions of 16% on shoulder width, 21% on hip width, 6.9% on chest girth, and 39% on body condition in animals with 60% of feed restriction. Feed restriction of 60% also reduced DM intake and final BW of lambs, which compromised most of the biometrical measurements. On the other hand, 30% of feed restriction can be an alternative feeding management because of the observed improvement in feed conversion and decreased total feed intake.
Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2014
Welber Daniel Zanetti Lopes; Breno Cayeiro Cruz; Weslen Fabricio Pires Teixeira; Gustavo Felippelli; Willian Giquelin Maciel; Carolina Buzzulini; Lucas Vinicius Costa Gomes; Flávia Carolina Fávero; Vando Edésio Soares; Murilo Abud Bichuette; Gilson Pereira de Oliveira; Alvirnar Jose da Costa
The present study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of fipronil (1 mg/kg) against three strains of ivermectin-resistant Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus (R. (B.) microplus), naturally infesting cattle from different states of Brazil. Three rural properties with a history of macrocyclic lactones ineffectiveness against the cattle tick, and low frequency use of fipronil in the herd, were selected for the study. The animals were randomized according to the mean tick counts, performed on days -3, -2 and -1, into three groups with 10 animals each: T01, control (saline solution); T02, subcutaneous ivermectin (0.63 mg/kg) and T03, topical fipronil (1 mg/kg). Treatment was performed on day 0. Counts of partially engorged female ticks were performed on days 3, 7 and 14 post-treatment (DPT), and then every 7 days until the 49th DPT. In all three experiments, it was possible to diagnose resistance of R. (B.) microplus to ivermectin (0.63 mg/kg). The maximum efficacy (arithmetic mean) obtained for ivermectin was 64% in experiment II. On the other hand, the formulation containing fipronil (1 mg/kg) reached high efficacy values (≥97%) in all three experiments. The results from all experiments in this study demonstrate the high efficacy of 1mg/kg fipronil, administered pour-on in naturally infested cattle, against strains of R. (B.) microplus that are resistant to 630 mcg/kg ivermectin.
Parasitology International | 2014
Gustavo Felippelli; Welber Daniel Zanetti Lopes; Breno Cayeiro Cruz; Weslen Fabricio Pires Teixeira; Willian Giquelin Maciel; Flávia Carolina Fávero; Carolina Buzzulini; Claudio Alessandro Massamitsu Sakamoto; Vando Edésio Soares; Lucas Vinicius Costa Gomes; Gilson Pereira de Oliveira; Alvimar José da Costa
Two high doses of ivermectin (630μg/kg and 700μg/kg) that are sold commercially in Brazil were evaluated in dose-and-slaughter trials with 144 naturally nematode-infected cattle from eight regions within the states of Minas Gerias, São Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil. Treatment groups were based on fecal egg counts 1, 2, and 3days before treatment; all animals studied had a minimum egg count of at least 500 eggs per gram of feces (EPG). Post-mortem analyses were conducted on day 14. The highest levels of resistance to ivermectin were found for Haemonchus placei, Cooperia punctata and Oesophagostomum radiatum; all populations of H. placei were resistant to the 630μg/kg dose, and 67% were resistant to 700μg/kg; 86% of C. punctata were resistant to the 630μg/kg dose, and 33% were resistant to 700μg/kg. A combined analysis revealed that 57% of O. radiatum were resistant to the lower dose of ivermectin. H. placei, C. punctata and O. radiatum, in order, were the nematode populations with the highest indices of resistance, whereas Trichostrongylus axei was the most susceptible to 630 and 700μg/kg dosages of ivermectin. The results of helminthic resistance to ivermectin for different populations of H. placei and C. punctata described in the present study support previous literature data, in which a small decrease in the average parasitic burden of C. punctata and a consequent increase of H. placei were observed in cattle from the Southeast, South and Center-West regions of Brazil.
Experimental Parasitology | 2014
Welber Daniel Zanetti Lopes; Breno Cayeiro Cruz; Vando Edésio Soares; Jorge Luis N. Nunes; Weslen Fabricio Pires Teixeira; Willian Giquelin Maciel; Carolina Buzzulini; João Carlos Melo Pereira; Gustavo Felippelli; Vanette Thomaz Soccol; Gilson Pereira de Oliveira; Alvimar José da Costa
The present study aimed to notify the history of albendazole sulphoxide (ALB-SO) and albendazole (ALBZ) efficacy against Taenia saginata cysticercus (Cysticercus bovis) parasitizing experimentally infected bovines. A total of 11 efficacy trials were performed between the years of 2002 and 2010. In order to perform these trials, animals were individually inoculated with 2×10(4) eggs of T. saginata in each studys day zero (D0). For every trial, a positive control group (untreated infected animals) and a negative control group (animals that were neither infected nor treated) were used. ALB-SO or ALB were administered in the different dosages, in different days of treatments. In a last study with this formulation, this active principle was administered orally, mixed with the mineral supplement, on the 60th DPI, in a dosage of 30mg/kg. In all trials, on the 100th DPI, all animals were euthanized and submitted to the sequenced slicing of 26 anatomical segments (fragments of approximately five millimeters) for the survey of T. saginata cysticercus. With the obtained results it is possible to verify that in the first trials, conducted in 2002, ALB-SO reached, independently of dosage and treatment scheme, efficacies superior to 98% (arithmetic means). The trials conducted in 2005 (2.5mg/kg on the 30th, 60th, and 90th DPI) obtained values of efficacy all inferior to 60%. In 2008, the trials with 2.5 and 7.7mg/kg demonstrated efficacy values inferior to 40%, for both dosages and treatment schemes (30th/60th/90th DPI and 60th DPI). When this formulation was administered orally on the dosage of 30mg/kg on the 60th DPI, the efficacy against T. saginata cysticercus reached 88.28%. ALB administered orally showed efficacy values of 0.0%, 29.88% and 28.64% in the dosages of 5, 10 and 15mg/kg, respectively, using the treatment schemes described above for each dosage. Based on the results of these trials, conducted in an eight year period (2002-2010) using the sequenced slicing method for evaluating the efficacy of the aforementioned formulations against T. saginata cysticercus, it is possible to observe that, amongst the few molecules used in the chemotherapic treatment against T. saginata larvae, ALB-SO, administered in varied routes, dosages and treatment schemes, the studies conducted in 2008, 2009, and 2010, have a low therapeutic efficacy against C. bovis in Brazil, while ALBZ had insignificant efficacy values against T. saginata larvae parasitizing experimentally infected bovines. However, future studies using molecular biology will be necessary to assess whether the difference on the efficacy of the ALB-SO can be related to strain or another specific factor.
Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2015
WillianGiquelin Maciel; Welber Daniel Zanetti Lopes; BrenoCayeiro Cruz; WeslenFabricioPires Teixeira; Gustavo Felippelli; Claudio AlessandroMassamitsu Sakamoto; Flávia Carolina Fávero; Carolina Buzzulini; VandoEdésio Soares; Lucas ViníciusCosta Gomes; MuriloAbud Bichuette; Alvimar José da Costa
Effects of Haematobia irritans infestation on weight gain of 18 to 20 months old non-castrated Nelore calves, were investigated, under field conditions, using different antiparasitic treatments. Sixty animals were divided in three groups, with 20 bovines each: T01 (untreated control); T02 (treated with Cypermethrin 15 g+Chlorpyriphos 25 g+Citronellal 1 g, as a whole body spray, on days 0, 30, 60, 90 and 120 post-treatment); and T03 (treated on day zero with an ear tag impregnated with Diazinon 6g on the left ear). Counts of H. irritans were conducted on day 30, 60, 90, 120 and 150 post-treatment (DPT). On the same experimental dates, animals were individually weighed, seeking to evaluate the effects of parasitism on the development of animals in each group. From this study it is concluded that T03 had significantly higher efficacy (>90%, till 90 DPT), based on H. irritans fly counts, compared to T02 which showed little or no effect. At the specific conditions of the present study, an average of approximately 90 flies (mean difference of flycounts between groups T01 and T03) was associated with a difference of 20 kg/animal in 150 days.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2015
Rafael Rodrigues Corrêa; Welber Daniel Zanetti Lopes; Weslen Fabricio Pires Teixeira; Breno Cayeiro Cruz; Lucas Vinicius Costa Gomes; Gustavo Felippelli; Willian Giquelin Maciel; Flávia Carolina Fávero; Carolina Buzzulini; Murilo Abud Bichuette; Vando Edésio Soares; Alvimar José da Costa
This study aimed to compare three different methodologies (Adult Immersion Tests, field trials with naturally infected animals, and a Stall Test using artificially infested cattle) to evaluate the efficacy of two topical formulations that we administered as whole body sprays (15% Cypermethrin+30% Chlorpyriphos+15% Fenthion-Colosso(®) FC 30, Ouro Fino Agronegócios; and 60% Dichlorvos+20% Chlorpyriphos-Ectofós(®), Vallée Saúde Animal Ltd.), against a susceptible strain of Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus. To achieve this objective, two natural infestation trials were conducted, as well as two artificial infestation trials (Stall Tests) and two Adult Immersion Tests (AIT). The AIT results showed that both spray formulations achieved 100% efficacy against R. (B.) microplus fully engorged females. However, when observing results obtained by field trials (natural infestations) and Stall Tests, none of these topically applied compounds reached 100% efficacy or affected the reproductive capacity of the fully engorged female ticks. Additional studies must be conducted to compare these in vivo methodologies with different in vitro techniques, such as the Larval Packet Test. However, based on results obtained here, we can conclude that depending on the spray formulations used, the AIT can overestimate acaricidal efficacy and values of reproductive efficiency of such compounds against R (B.) microplus. Specifically, when dealing with spray formulations in the Stall Tests, the period of residual action can increase because these animals are sheltered from contact with environmental factors that might interfere with the efficacy of the products tested. It may be necessary to take in vivo trial results into consideration (such as field trials with naturally infested animals or Stall Tests) to standardize a specific in vitro assay, such as the Adult Immersion Test.
Research in Veterinary Science | 2014
Breno Cayeiro Cruz; Weslen Fabricio Pires Teixeira; Willian Giquelin Maciel; Gustavo Felippelli; Flávia Carolina Fávero; André Cayeiro Cruz; Carolina Buzzulini; Vando Edésio Soares; Lucas Vinicius Costa Gomes; Welber Daniel Zanetti Lopes; Gilson Pereira de Oliveira; Alvimar José da Costa
The current study assessed the deleterious effects of two formulations of fluazuron (2.5 mg/kg fluazuron and a combination of 3.0 mg/kg fluazuron + 0.5 mg/kg abamectin) on the reproductive parameters of engorged Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus females that naturally detached from experimentally infested cattle in two experiments. Based on the obtained results, it can be concluded that fluazuron (2.5 mg/kg) showed deleterious effects only on the hatchability percentage in the period of 2-7 post-treatment days of this ectoparasites engorged females. On the other hand, the fluazuron (3.0 mg/kg) + abamectin (0.5 mg/kg) combination presented harmful effects over reproductive parameters of this tick species. Further studies should be performed with a known tick population (reference susceptible strain) to determine the effect of these formulations on the reproductive parameters and to elucidate if this field population is fluazuron resistant.