Abstract

Abstract This study aimed to evaluate the effects of autohemotherapy as an adjuvant in the control of gastrointestinal nematodes in sheep. Four experimental groups were formed: G1, 10 animals receiving autologous venous blood; G2, 10 animals receiving autologous venous blood and vermifuge containing levamisole; G3, 10 animals receiving only vermifuge containing levamisole; and G4, 10 animals as the control group receiving no treatment. We performed fecal egg count (eggs per gram, EPG) of strongyles, larval culture, hemogram, leukogram, and serum protein dosage prior to the start of treatment (D0), and on days 14 (D14) and 42 (D42). There was a significant decrease in the EPG of the groups receiving levamisole (G2 and G3) from D14 to the end of the experimental period. At the end of the evaluations, the mean EPG of G2 and G3 was significantly lower than that of G1 and G4. The most common nematode genus was Haemonchus (88%), and the least common was Trichostrongylus (1%). The Fecal Egg Count Reduction Test (FECRT) of G2 and G3 on D14 were 98.1% and 97.9%, respectively, however, in G1, the FECRT was zero on the two days when evaluation took place. G1 and G2 showed a significant increase in monocyte counts on D14 and D42. There was a significant increase in hematocrit and hemoglobin values in G2 and G3, however, a significant increase in the absolute value of red blood cells was observed only in G2. Two doses of autohemotherapy at 21-day intervals, administered alone or as an adjuvant to levamisole, is ineffective in controlling gastrointestinal nematodes in naturally infected sheep.

Highlights

  • Introduction14.9% of sheep and lambs in Brazil are in the south, and 3.0% are in Paraná[1]

  • The state of Paraná has 588,996 head of sheep and lambs

  • Small ruminants are affected by various sanitary problems, with gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) being the main barrier to their development

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Summary

Introduction

14.9% of sheep and lambs in Brazil are in the south, and 3.0% are in Paraná[1]. Small ruminants are affected by various sanitary problems, with gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) being the main barrier to their development. There are several proposals for alternatives to control GIN, such as the selection of resistant breeds[6], phytotherapy and biological therapy[7,8,9], nematophagous fungi[10,11], vaccines against nematodes[12], and tannin-containing fodder[13]. Isotherapy was initially used in the 1930s by François Lamson, a French homeopath physician, for the treatment of intestinal parasitoses. This researcher used large dilutions of blood serum to treat amoebic dysentery, oxyuriasis, ascariasis, and teniasis. Autohemotherapy, which consists of removing blood from the animal and injecting it

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