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Veterinary Parasitology | 2002

28 kDa Fasciola gigantica cysteine proteinase in the diagnosis of prepatent ovine fasciolosis.

A.K. Dixit; S.C Yadav; R.L. Sharma

Coprological confirmation of ovine fasciolosis in the field, prior to out breaks of the disease and/or strategic antifluke medication, seem to be of little consequence. Efforts are, therefore, being made to evolve a putative antigen specific to serodiagnostic test for early diagnosis during prepatency. In the present investigation, 28 kDa cysteine proteinase was used in ELI SA and Western blot to detect Fasciola gigantica antibodies and further Dipstick-ELISA was developed for field application, using known positive monospecific sera from experimentally infected sheep with 100 F. gigantica metacercariae. Isolation of 28 kDa cysteine proteinase was achieved from bubalian origin flukes. The specific antigen, recognised homologous antifluke antibodies by Western blot as early as 2nd week post-infection (wpi) with 100% sensitivity, in sera samples of sheep harbouring 38 flukes and by 10th wpi in sheep harbouring 3-8 flukes. All sheep were found positive for the infection when ELISA and/or Dipstick-ELISA was applied from 4th wpi. In pooled sera of infected sheep, these were positive during 4th wpi.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1999

Primary experimental infection of riverine buffaloes with Fasciola gigantica.

S.C Yadav; R.L. Sharma; A Kalicharan; U.R. Mehra; R.S Dass; A.K. Verma

The clinical course of the primary experimental Fasciola gigantica infection was investigated in riverine buffalo calves of the Murrah breed. Nine male calves aged 12-15 months were randomly assigned to two groups of five (Group I) and four (Group II) animals. Each animal in Group I, was orally infected with 1000 metacercariae (mc) of F. gigantica, whereas Group II animals did not receive any infection dose and served as uninfected controls. No clinical signs of fasciolosis were observed until the sixth week post-infection (PI). Group I animals, however, developed recognised symptoms of acute fasciolosis, comprising apyrexic inappetance, anemia, poor weight gain, diarrhoea and sub-mandibular and facial oedema, respectively, from 5, 6, 8, 16 and 17 weeks PI. The signs were intermittent in nature and of variable duration. The prepatent period was of 92-97 days (mean 95.2 +/- 3.1). One of the five infected animals died on Day 147 PI. At necropsy, 36.8 +/- 11.0% of the infection dose was recovered as adult fluke population. The gross lesions were primarily biliary in nature. Group II, the uninfected controls, throughout the study period of 165 days PI, did not show any symptom and were negative for F. gigantica. The study demonstrated that the onset of adverse effects of F. gigantica on the growth and health of the infected host was mainly noted during late prepatency much before coprological prediction and diagnosis. The significance of preventive therapy against fasciolosis during prepatency has been stressed in endemic areas.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1982

Gastro-intestinal nematodes in sheep in Kashmir

D.N. Dhar; R.L. Sharma; G.C. Bansal

Examination at necropsy of the abomasum and intestinal tract of 62 sheep (including both sexes) of Karnah breed, aged one to two years over a period of one year was conducted at Handwara, situated in the north-west of Kashmir Valley. The following species of nematodes were found: Haemonchus contortus, Trichostrongylus axei, Trichostrongylus colubriformis, Bunostomum trigonocephalum, Chabertia ovina, Nematodirus spathiger, Skrjabinema ovis and Trichuris ovis. Infections with Trichostrongylus axei and T. colubriformis were, respectively, 57.7 and 40.2% of the total of all nematodes recovered. Faecal examination of adult sheep of Karnah breed, aged two to four years, comprising mostly pregnant and lactating ewes, showed a rise in strongyle egg counts during the months of March and April, coinciding with the lambing season in the area. The lambs showed a rise in faecal strongyle egg output from May onwards. The counts reached their peak during the month of September. It is presumed that pastures contaminated by pregnant and lactating ewes during the spring season were responsible for the acquisition of heavy nematode infections by lambs in the area.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1990

Anthelmintic activity of ivermectin against experimental Ascaridia galli infection in chickens

R.L. Sharma; T.K. Bhat; Hemaprasanth

The efficacy of ivermectin against Ascaridia galli infection was evaluated in chickens under controlled laboratory conditions in two separate experiments. In each experiment 22 White Leghorn chicks were randomly assigned to three groups of 10 (infected-treated), 9 (infected-control) and 3 (uninfected-control) birds. Each bird in the former two groups was orally infected with 1,500 embryonated A. galli eggs. The chicks in the treated group were subcutaneously injected with ivermectin at a dose of 0.3 mg kg-1 body weight on Day 10 (Experiment 1) and Day 35 post-infection (Experiment 2) for immature and adult infections, respectively. The treated birds had 0.9% (Experiment 1) and 0.4% (Experiment 2) worm recovery compared with 8.7 and 8% in the infected-untreated controls of the respective experiments. The fall in post-treatment faecal egg counts was 81 and 92% in birds treated on Days 10 and 35, respectively. The drug was found to be 90 and 95% effective against immature and adult worms, respectively. The lower lesion score and post-treatment near-normal haematobiochemical picture in treated birds confirmed these observations. The treated birds also had a better growth rate than the untreated chickens. The mature worms in the intestinal lumen of the host were more sensitive to the treatment than the immature stages of the parasite in the tissue phase.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1994

Parasitic infections of Indian yak Bos (poephagus) grunniens—an overview

G.S.C. RangaRao; R.L. Sharma; Hemaprasanth

For centuries, the yak and its hybrids with domestic cows (dzomo/dzo) have been contributing to the socio-economic status of their owners in desolate regions of the Greater Himalayas. Studies on the prevalence of parasitic diseases in these animals were undertaken in Ladakh (Jammu and Kashmir), Sikkim and villages near the Indo-Nepal border of Uttar Pradesh. Visceral organs of necropsied animals were observed for the presence of adult metazoan parasites, fresh or preserved faecal samples were examined for the eggs of helminth parasites and protozoan cysts, and blood smears were examined for haemo-protozoa and microfilariae. In all, examination of 225 faecal samples, 180 blood smears and the visceral organs of thirteen yaks and dzomo/dzo was undertaken. On necropsy, visceral organs revealed various adult liver and stomach flukes, gastrointestinal nematodes, tapeworms, cysts of Coenurus spp. and hydatid cysts, as well as Setaria cervi worms and large and/or small sized Sarcocystis cysts. On coprological examination, egg prevalences of 10% for Fasciola spp., 6.6% for various amphistomes, 10% for Moniezia spp., 76.4% for Strongylate spp., 24% for Neoascaris spp. and 13.7% for Nematodirus spp. were recorded. Identification of infective larvae from the faecal cultures showed that a majority of eggs (86.3%) in the host faeces were contributed by nematodes belonging to Trichostrongyle spp., Ostertagia spp. and Cooperia spp. This was followed by Chabertia spp. (6.5%). Haemonchus spp., Bunostomum spp. and Nematodirus spp. together contributed only 7.2% of the eggs found. Among protozoan infections, Eimeria brasiliensis and E. zurnii were common. None of the blood smears evidenced any haemoprotozoa or microfilariae. Likewise, none of the animals were positive for Trichuris spp.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Veterinary Parasitology | 1981

Immunization with irradiated larvae against Dictyocaulus filaria in young lambs

D.N. Dhar; R.L. Sharma

In the lungworm-endemic areas of Kashmir, 6-10 week old lambs of Karnah and Kashmir Merino breeds were vaccinated with two doses of 50 kR gamma-irradiated larvae of Dictyocaulus filaria, given a month apart. Assessed on the basis of reduced prevalence and significantly lower faecal larval output over an eight-month observation period, vaccinated lambs showed a high degree of resistance to naturally acquired D. filaria infection. The results also show that vaccination against D. filaria provided some degree of protection against infection with other lungworm species.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1994

Parasitic bronchitis in goats and the possible use of Dictyocaulus filaria vaccine for its control

R.L. Sharma

Parasitic bronchitis is widely prevalent in migratory flocks of small ruminants in the northwest Himalayan regions of India. The prevalence data collected from 5554 goats, maintained in 31 villages in different agroclimatic regions of the Himalayas, showed that the prevalence of the disease in goats varied from 18.7 to 47.6% with an overall prevalence of 21.8%. Interestingly, 27.6% of goats maintained at an altitude of 2700-3900 m above mean sea level in Kargil (Jammu and Kashmir), where the climate is cold and dry for the major part of the year, were positive for the lungworm infections. The common lungworms observed were Dictyocaulus filaria, Protostrongylus rufescens, Varestrongylus pneumonicus and occasionally Muellerius spp. The kids were more susceptible to lungworm infections than adult goats. In experimental studies, it was seen that goats were more susceptible to Dictyocaulus filaria infection than sheep and two vaccine doses comprising 1000 and 2000 gamma-attenuated D. filaria (ovine strain) infective larvae conferred 97% protection in male Beetal kids against a homologous challenge dose of 4200 normal D. filaria larvae. The importance of simultaneous control of the disease in goats and sheep is discussed.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1989

Effect of Dictyocaulus filaria infection on the osmotic fragility of sheep erythrocytes.

R.L. Sharma; T.K. Bhat; D.N. Dhar

The osmotic fragility of erythrocytes in lambs experimentally infected with Dictyocaulus filaria was studied weekly for 71 weeks. In acute infection, the erythrocytic fragility increased from the third week of infection onwards, reached its peak by the eleventh week and declined thereafter. However, in the chronic immune-carrier stage, this increase in the fragility did not return to normal until the end of the experiment. This enhanced fragility showed a positive correlation with the faecal larval count, worm burden and the extent of lung damage in lambs.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1981

The effect of inoculum size and betamethasone treatment on the course of infection with Dictyocaulus filaria in lambs

D.N. Dhar; R.L. Sharma; G.C. Bansal

Abstract The effect of Betamethasone treatment on faecal larval production in lambs infected with Dictyocaulus filaria was studied. Four-to-six-month-old male lambs were infected with D. filaria at a dose of 75 larvae per kg body weight (L/kg) and subsequently treated with a total dose of 14 mg of Betamethasone, administered in divided doses, either during the early (day 5–15) or late (day 30–40) stages of infection. Faecal larval yields in treated animals during the period of patency were compared with those of un-treated controls and also with lambs infected with a dose of 150 L/kg. Higher worm establishment, as well as higher percentage survival of infected animals during patency, were associated with infections of 75 L/kg in comparison to 150 L/kg. Treatment with Betamethasone during the early stages of infection resulted in higher worm establishment but similar treatment given during the late stages of infection produced no such effects. The number of larvae per gram of faeces was higher in animals receiving infections of 150 L/kg in comparison to 75 L/kg. Treatment with Betamethasone, whether given during the early or late stages of infection, increased larval output in faeces of infected lambs. However, the output did not reach the levels shown by lambs given infections of 150 L/kg. The total estimated faecal larval yields for the period of patency were higher in the treated animals. The yields were much higher in animals treated during early stages of the infection.


Veterinary Parasitology | 1990

Effect of bronchodilator and intravascular oxygen releaser on the course of Dictyocaulus filaria infection in lambs

R.L. Sharma; T.K. Bhat

The effect of a bronchodilator (or ciprenaline sulphate) and intravascular oxygen releaser (sodium dihydrogen orthophosphate) on the host in experimental Dictyocaulus filaria infection was studied. Fifteen male lambs of Dorset-Muzaffarnagri breed, aged 4-6 months, were divided into four groups of four (infected bronchodilator), four (infected i.v. O2 releaser), four (infected untreated controls) and three (uninfected controls). The administration of i.v. O2 releaser helped in increasing the length of useful patency, estimated total larval production and survival rate of D. filaria producer lambs. The administration of I.V. O2 releaser and bronchodilator helped in efficiently restoring the altered values of blood pH, haemoglobin, packed cell volume, erythrocyte sedimentation rate and osmotic fragility of erythrocytes to near normal levels. However, the blood clotting time and level of lactate dehydrogenase activity remained altered and followed a course typical of ovine dictyocauliosis.

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D.N. Dhar

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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S.C Yadav

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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T.K. Bhat

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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A.K. Dixit

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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G.C. Bansal

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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Hemaprasanth

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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A Kalicharan

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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A.K. Verma

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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B.P. Singh

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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D. Chandra

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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