Haemonchosis in a sheep flock in North Finland
2010; BioMed Central; Volume: 52; Issue: S1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1186/1751-0147-52-s1-s19
ISSN1751-0147
AutoresSaana-Maaria Manninen, Antti Oksanen,
Tópico(s)Coccidia and coccidiosis research
ResumoBackground In May 2008 two sheep from a farm in Ylikiiminki (65°N 26°E) were autopsied at Finnish Food Safety Authority Evira in Oulu and diagnosed with a Haemonchus contortus infection. Haemonchus contortus has a few years ago been reported on the island of Hailuoto just outside Oulu, where it led to a lethal infection. Although this to sheep highly pathogenic nematode has been detected in Finland already in 1933 by Agnes Sjoberg [1], it has apparently never been reported so far up north in Finland. In Sweden H. contortus has almost reached the Arctic Circle [2]. It does not survive the Nordic winter on pasture, but with almost 100 % arrested development in the early fourth larval stage it is capable of surviving the Nordic winter within its host [3]. The farm the infected sheep originated from is a small sheep farm with also a few goats and other domestic animals such as horses, turkeys and rabbits. They had bought their first sheep in November 2006, part of the ewes being pregnant at time of purchase and lambed in January. The sheep are of Finnish race, Texel-Oxford, Kainuu grey and cross-breeds. In the winter the sheep are housed in an approximately 150 m barn with thick straw bedding and access to a corral sized about 500 m. Grazing grounds from May until snowfall (in October) consists of approximately 4 ha of pasture and 1 ha of mixed forest. According to the owner the totally about 35 sheep and 4 goats mainly used the pasture grass as their nutrition, but were also given hay in round bales, when the feeding area became very contaminated with faeces. The drinking water was accessible in the nearby river Kiiminkijoki. The animals were treated with fenbendazole in the autumn of 2007. In the spring of 2008 many of the sheep (age 1+) became weak and developed an oedema under the jaw. Two of these animals (one died and one shot) were autopsied and the rest of the ones with symptoms were killed and buried. The autopsy findings included oedema under the jaw, paleness due to anemia and abomasitis caused by a severe parasite infection.
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