Abstract

One-year old worm free, merino wethers, were each infected with 5000 H. contortus larvae of a strain resistant to mebendazole at a rate of 52 mg/kg body weight of sheep. After 21 days, they were assigned to two trials. The preliminary trial showed that mebendazole and levamisole acted synergistically on the H. contortus infection. In the second trial, sheep were treated with 0.35 mg/kg levamisole (one seventh the minimum effective dose against susceptible worms) or 40 mg/kg mebendazole (40 times the minimum effective dose against susceptible worms). In each case the anthelmintics did not reduce worm burdens, although mebendazole depressed egg production. However, when mebendazole and levamisole, at the above dose rates, were administered simultaneously, total worm counts in sheep were reduced by almost 60%. Similar results were obtained when the levamisole was administered 8 h or 14 h after mebendazole treatment. The implications of these observations for the treatment of benzimidazole-resistant haemonchiasis in sheep are discussed.

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