The guidelines were reviewed and updated by the AAEP Internal Parasite Control Guidelines Task Force, chaired by Dr. Nielsen and comprised of 10 AAEP members predominantly board certified in veterinary internal medicine, veterinary parasitology and/or veterinary microbiology.
“We have seen dramatic development in the field of equine parasite control over the past 10 years, since we first launched these guidelines, and we work hard to keep our recommendations up to date,” said Martin Nielsen, DVM, PhD, DVSc, DAVCM, DEVPC, Schlaikjer Professor of Equine Infectious Diseases at the University of Kentucky.
Important conclusions to be drawn from the revised guidelines are to:
- Perform fecal egg count reduction tests annually to ensure that you are using effective dewormers in every herd or barn.
- Recognize that no anthelmintic will eliminate all parasitic stages from a horse.
- Continue using fecal egg counts once or twice per year to stratify horses into low, medium and high shedders to reduce pasture contamination.
- Deworm all horses at a baseline rate and target selected horses more often based on fecal egg counts.
- Not use fecal egg counts to diagnose disease in horses as there is no correlation between fecal egg counts and disease-causing parasite life stages.
- Discontinue deworming all horses with fixed intervals year-round and stop blindly rotating anthelmintic classes.
View the guidelines at https://aaep.org/resource/internal-parasite-control-guidelines.
You can access the entire guidelines document by clicking the Download Resource button.
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