Currently, no in vivo laboratory model is available for evaluating anthelmintics against the important ruminant helminth Haemonchus contortus. This report outlines a novel anthelmintic assay utilizing immunosuppressed (0.02% hydrocortisone in feed) jirds, Meriones unguiculatus, infected with H. contortus. Immunosuppressed jirds were inoculated with approximately 1,000 exsheathed infective larvae of H. contortus, treated per os on day 10 postinoculation (PI), and necropsied on day 13 PI. Each stomach was removed, opened longitudinally, incubated in distilled water at 37 C for 5 hr, fixed in formaldehyde solution, and stored for subsequent examination. Stomach contents were examined using a stereomicroscope (15-45x). A variety of standard anthelmintics has been evaluated in the model; modern broad-spectrum ruminant anthelmintics (benzimidazoles, febantel, ivermectin, levamisole hydrochloride, and milbemycin D) are active uniformly and in most cases at doses (mg/kg) comparable to those required for efficacy against H. contortus in ruminants. This model provides an important new tool to assess preliminarily the activity of experimental drugs against H. contortus in vivo prior to studies in ruminants and also may provide a useful tool for studying host-parasite interactions for H. contortus.
Growth and development of Haemonchus contortus were examined in jirds and were compared to these processes in lambs. Number, sex, size, and stage of development were determined for worms recovered at necropsy at various times postinoculation (PI) from immunosuppressed jirds inoculated with approximately 1,000 exsheathed infective larvae (L3) of H. contortus. In addition, gastric tissue samples from jirds were examined histologically. Parallel studies were done in lambs inoculated with approximately 7,500 L3. Typically, 5-30% of the inoculum established and survived in jirds at reasonably stable numbers to day 14 PI. By day 21 PI, worm numbers in jirds decreased dramatically. Although the parasite was similar in size and development on day 4 PI in jirds and lambs, from day 7 PI on, worms were significantly smaller and less developed in jirds. On histological examination, the parasite was found only in the glandular portion of the stomach of jirds (anatomically similar to its predilection site in the abomasum of lambs), and histological changes were consistent for both host species. Although growth and development of H. contortus are slower and incomplete in jirds, the parasite establishes, grows, and develops (at anatomically comparable sites in both hosts) in this model. Thus, the model appears to provide a useful laboratory host to study H. contortus.
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