Abstract
Experimental primary and challenge Schistosoma bovis infections were studied in West African Dwarf goats, using clinicopathological and parasitological parameters. The experiment included 44 goats divided into 4 groups of which group A received primary infection, group B received primary and challenge infection, group C received a challenge control infection, and group D included noninfected controls. Primary infection (wk 0) and challenge infection (wk 16) both comprised exposure to 1,000 cercariae per goat, and necropsies took place 16, 22 and 32 wk following primary infection. Clinicopathological effects were moderate in all infected groups. Egg excretion became gradually reduced following peak levels during early primary infection, and egg excretion increased only marginally following challenge infection in the primary- and challenge-infection group. Similarly, challenge infection of primary-infected goats did not result in an increase in tissue egg counts. Worm recovery and tissue egg counts in primary-infected goats remained comparable throughout the experiment, and although evidence was obtained for a delay in maturation, challenge worm establishment was comparable with challenge-control worm establishment. An anti-fecundity effect is thus an essential component of the regulatory response to both primary and challenge S. bovis infection in the goats. However, it was also shown that the intrauterine egg count is an unreliable parameter for fecundity assessments.
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