Livestock News

Dewormer dilemma: How to choose the right parasite control

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Many cattle producers know the benefits of deworming cattle firsthand — increased weight gains and breeding efficiency, reduced pasture contamination, improved immune status and more — but choosing the right dewormer for your operation is often a different story.

“To reap these benefits and reduce the risk of resistance, it’s critical to use the most effective product at the most strategic times,” said Dr. Doug Ensley, DVM, Professional Services Veterinarian with Boehringer Ingelheim Vetmedica, Inc. (BIVI).

Ensley recommends reviewing the following questions with your veterinarian:

  1. What type of operation do you have?
  2. What parasite problems have you had in the past?
  3. What have your deworming practices been in the past? Have you been satisfied?
  4. Have you tested the effectiveness of your dewormer using a fecal egg count reduction test?
  5. What climate do you live in? What are your parasite risks in the summer vs. winter?
  6. What has the season been like this year?
  7. What are your pasture management strategies?
  8. How do you manage your cattle?
  9. Do you process your cattle once per year or twice per year?
  10. Are you handling your calves prior to weaning?
  11. How do you market your calves? Do you hold them or sell them at weaning?
  12. What are your grazing practices?

Understanding antiparasitic resistance is also important when considering your parasite control options. Antiparasitic resistance is the genetic ability of parasites to survive the effects of an antiparasitic drug that was previously effective, and it continues to show up in U.S. cattle.

“We have little knowledge about the true extent of the problem,” said Dr. Ray Kaplan, DVM, PhD, University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine. “However, based on my own experience testing operations and discussing with colleagues around the country, resistance in some species of parasites is a real problem and quite widespread.”

Managing “refugia” is a relatively new approach to tackling the issue, Kaplan said, and many producers may not understand it or be aware of its benefits. Refugia is the concept of leaving some internal parasites unexposed to a dewormer, essentially giving them refuge, and thereby reducing the drug-resistance selection pressure caused by the dewormer. It can help slow down the development of resistance.

Successful implementation of refugia may include:

  • Not deworming all cattle when there are few parasite larvae on the pasture. In the South, this would be during the hottest part of the year, and in the North, during the coldest part of the year.
  • Only deworming incoming cattle and leaving resident cattle untreated during extensive dry periods, when infection is low.
  • Not using the same class of dewormer on resident cattle repeatedly.
  • Not using a dewormer and then moving immediately to a clean pasture, as this will contaminate the new pasture with only resistant parasites.
  • Not deworming at least 10 percent of the animals, known as “selective non-treatment.”

“For the selective non-treatment strategy to work, it’s critical that for the 90 percent you are deworming, the drug you use is highly effective,” Kaplan cautioned.

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