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<b>EVALUATION OF THE POTENTIAL OF SYSTEMIC SLOW RELEASE CHEMICAL TREATMENTS FOR CONTROL OF THE CATTLE TICK</b><i>(BOOPHILUS MICROPLUS)</i><b>USING IVERMECTIN</b>

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Citations

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References

1981

Year

Abstract

Stall and field trials with cattle infested with various acaricide-resistant strains of cattle tick, have demonstrated the potential of ivermectin as a systemic tickicide. A dosage of 200 micrograms/kg, administered subcutaneously to animals naturally infested in the field, gave satisfactory tick control for 21 days, after an initial lag period of 2 days immediately following treatment, during which significant numbers of ticks survived. Daily subcutaneous treatments, administered so as to simulate slow release, indicated that a dosage of 15 micrograms/kg/day should give complete tick control if the chemical could be released continuously from a subcutaneous implant. The potency of ivermectin assessed by in vitro tests against engorged adults, suggests that the tickicidal activity could be associated with the parent compound per se rather than a metabolite.

References

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