PaBi (13): Veterinary helminths Flashcards

1
Q

Give an example of a helminth that infects sheep.

A

Haemonchus contortus

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2
Q

What are the benefits of controlling veterinary parasites?

A

Improved health and welfare of the animal, reduces losses for food and economy, ensures high food quality

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3
Q

What are the signs of a helminth infection in sheep?

A

Weight loss, severe abdominal pain, diarrhoea, anaemia, bottle jaw

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4
Q

What is the pathogenesis of intestinal nematodes?

A

Tissue damage, impaired uptake of nutrients, loss of gut integrity

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5
Q

What are the pros and cons of anthelmintics?

A

pros: cheap, safe, there’s a broad spectrum of drugs, have immediate action. cons: residues can be left in meat and milk, resistance

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6
Q

What is the mode of action of benzimidazoles?

A

Binds to tubulin to prevent microtubules forming. This leads to less transport of vesicles so reduced glucose uptake and starvation of the parasite.

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7
Q

What is the mode of action of the class of drugs imidazothiazoles?

A

It mimics acetyl choline and is a nicotinic receptor agonist so results in spastic paralysis of the parasite

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8
Q

What is the mode of action of the ML drugs?

A

Binds to GABA receptors to stimulate permanent opening of the nerve channel and flaccid paralysis

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9
Q

What is the mode of action of the AAD class of drugs?

A

Is an agonist of an AchR only found in nematodes which cause muscle contraction and interferes with mobility and growth.

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10
Q

What is the function of spiroindoles?

A

Nicotinic agonists which interfere with the attachment of ACh and interferes with nerve-muscle communication causing paralysis

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11
Q

What is the definition of resistance?

A

A hereditary decrease in the sensitivity of a parasite population to the action of a drug

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12
Q

How widespread is resistance to anthelmintics?

A

Resistance has been reported in all the classes in between ~25-45 countries. Less resistance to AAD (only 4 countries reported resistance)

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13
Q

What is prevalence?

A

How widespread something is- how many individuals are affected at one time

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14
Q

What is the prevalence of resistance in the UK?

A

About 80% of farms have reported BZ resistance, 30-50% resistance to LEV and IVM, 40% of Welsh farms have multiple class resistance, no resistance to AD or SI yet

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15
Q

What are some mechanisms of resistance?

A

Changes in the drug target, amplification of target genes to overcome drug action, changes in metabolism to inactivate drug, changes in distribution of the drug within the organism so it can’t reach it’s target site

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16
Q

Give some examples of changes in the target site which have allowed resistance.

A

Mutation in beta tubulin gene confers resistance to BZ. Decreased affinity for LEV at the nicotinic Ach receptors. SNP mutationon GluCl subunits for ML resistance

17
Q

What metabolic changes in the parasite have allowed drug resistance?

A

Enzymatic mechanisms for handling xenobiotics, cytochrome oxidase pathway is important in Fasciola hepatica

18
Q

What is the function of P-glycoprotein homologues in parasites?

A

Over-expression allows efflux of drug and it has been involved in resistance to multiple classes of drug

19
Q

What are three tests that can be used to test for anthelmintic resistance?

A

Controlled efficacy test- animals are infected treated then killed and their gastrointestinal tract is removed an worm burden analysed. Post drench efficacy test- number of eggs counted after treatment, if there is eggs it is considered ineffective. Faecal egg count reduction test- eggs counted in faeces before and after treatment

20
Q

What genetic changes in the parasite could we look for to diagnose resistance?

A

Mutations in drug target genes, changes in gene expression of drug handling system.

21
Q

How do we manage resistance?

A

avoid under-dosing, have quarantine measures for imported stock, check annually for resistance, target treatments effectively