Abstract

The ultrastructural morphology of the different endogenous stages of Eimeria maxima and E. brunetti was evaluated after oral treatment of inoculated chickens with a single dose of 5 mg/kg diclazuril. The drug induced no ultrastructural change in the growth or differentiation of the various schizont stages of both Eimeria spp. In E. maxima, the micromorphological appearance of micro- and macrogamonts developing from the blast from to maturation also remained unaffected by drug treatment. However, in all fertilized macrogamonts the normal pattern of oocyst wall establishment was completely disturbed, resulting in the formation of an abnormally thickened, incomplete oocyst wall and the necrosis of the zygote. In E. brunetti, the growth and nuclear division during microgametogenesis were not affected but differentiation was clearly abnormal. In comparison with the controls, this abnormal differentiation was characterized by a less extensive enlargement of the parasite surface area, aberrant morphological configurations of condensed heterochromatin, intracytoplasmic flagella formation, and glycogen accumulation. Finally, the complete degeneration of all microgamonts ensued. The growth and differentiation leading to mature macrogamonts was not disturbed; however, subsequent oocyst wall formation was largely precluded and the macrogamonts proceeded to degenerate completely. We conclude that diclazuril treatment primarily affected particular stages in the sexual development of both Eimeria spp., resulting in the complete eradication of these coccidian species.

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