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Resistance of field strains of Haemonchus contortus to ivermectin, closantel, rafoxanide and the benzimidazoles in South Africa
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1988
Year
Field StrainsParasitic DiseaseAntiparasitic AgentMedicinePesticide ResistanceEntomologySouth AfricaHaemonchus Contortus ResistantInduced ResistancePest ManagementMicrobiologyHaemonchus ContortusH ContortusPharmacologyHelminth InfectionAntimicrobial ResistanceParasitologyDrug Resistance
After a first description in 1975 of a strain of Haemonchus contortus resistant to the benzimidazole anthelmintics in South Africa, further strains of the same species developed resistance to rafoxanide and closantel, and a strain of Ostertagia species became resistant to the benzimidazoles. Recently five further strains of H contortus have been found which show resistance to these anthelmintics. Of these, four showed varying degrees of resistance to ivermectin and one was resistant to three anthelmintic groups. One of the strains became resistant to ivermectin very rapidly despite effective rotation of this anthelmintic with chemically unrelated anthelmintic compounds.