Effect of various anthelmintics on growing-finishing swine reared on dirt lots

Date

2010-04-19T17:17:31Z

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University. Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service

Abstract

Two trials involving 262 pigs were conducted to evaluate five worming programs for growing-finishing pigs fed on dirt lots heavily infected with roundworm (Ascarid) eggs. The control pigs (no anthelmentic) were compared in performance (ADG, F/G) and lung liver lesions at slaughter with pigs that received ivermectin on day 1 or day 28, pyrantel tartrate for the first 28 days, or purge treatments between day 28 to 31 with dichlovos or fenbendazole. All pigs gained at a similar rate regard less of treatment; however, those pigs receiving fenbendozole were 8.4% more efficient and those receiving Ivermectin on day 28 were 6% more efficient when compared to the controls. Pigs receiving pyrantel tartrate, dichlorvos, and ivermectin on day 1 were similar to the control pigs in feed efficiency. Results for liver and lung lesion scores were varied. In trial 1, 12% of the Iivers were free of ascarid scars and 13.8% of the livers were ruled inedible. In trial 2, 23.3% of the livers showed no lesions, but a different U.S.D.A. inspector condemned 54.4% of the livers even though the average liver lesion scores were similar to those in trial 1.

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Keywords

Swine, Growing-finishing pigs

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