Deworming Strategy

Deworming by fecal egg count (FEC) is advocated as a way to avoid overexposure of parasites to deworming drugs. It’s important to understand the effect of deworming by FEC is primarily to minimize environmental contamination, not optimally protect the individual.

Young horses, PPID horses and seniors in general are at high risk for parasitism. Even some young adult horses have poor parasite resistance.  Much damage is done by immature forms that are not even laying eggs yet.

The problem with FECs is their limited capacity to detect parasites.

– they only reflect adults that are actively laying eggs at the time of the test
– egg-laying activity may vary seasonally
– tapes often missed because eggs are laid in packets/segments, not evenly mixed in the manure
– can’t detect tissue forms or immature stages in the lumen but these can be the most harmful for the host
– bots missed
– pinworms missed (lay their eggs on the perianal skin)
– Strongyloides in adults not detected

None of that matters in terms of herd health because small Strongyles are the major threat and the only mode of transmission is contamination of the environment by fecal shedding, but it sure matters to the individual.

The other problem is technical limitations. Samples sent through the mail are useless. Samples not collected as soon as they are passed then kept cold are likely inaccurate. The reason is that eggs hatch and flotation methods do not pick up larvae.

As for resistance, helminths come equipped with drug metabolizing enzymes which in some individuals transform the dewormers to harmless compounds. Obviously those genetically fortunate enough to possess those enzymes are the most likely to become resistant by upregulating enzyme activity when they are exposed to the drug – if it doesn’t kill them first.

Any parasitologist will tell you the major way resistance develops is underdosing. (Ditto for antibiotics and bacteria.) What doesn’t kill them makes them stronger. Frequent exposure can cause a dewormer to go from a 20% failure rate to 80% or higher.

It’s also true they can’t be fully resistant to a drug they have never been exposed to so there is an argument in favor of not automatically exposing parasites to a variety of dewormer drugs (rotation).  On the other hand dead parasites do not develop resistance or pass it on to their descendants.

In any case,  it’s wise not to attempt to deworm with drugs that are known to have widespread resistance in the species you are treating. This includes the following reported resistances:

  • Roundworms (Ascarids): Ivermectin, moxidectin, pyrantel
  • Strongyles: Fenbendazole, pyrantel, albendazole
  • Pinworms: https://wp.me/p2WBdh-G5

Last but far from least, there is growing evidence that the practice of only deworming by FEC is leading to reemergence of Strongylus vulgaris – “bloodworms”.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9034621/

These are the large Strongyles which do significant damage to the intestine and arterial system when they are migrating. Back when I was starting out as a veterinarian we still had to deal with many horses with S. vulgaris damage and it wasn’t pretty – severe recurrent colic, intestinal infarction, peritonitis, debilitating lameness, even to the point of euthanasia. If you wait to see the eggs in feces, it may be too late. Regular deworming with ivermectin or moxidectin had all but wiped them out.

Deworming strategies have gone from one extreme to another – from frequent, regularly scheduled treatments to deworming only on evidence of egg-laying adults on FECs. Neither is ideal. Speak to your vet about developing a program that is optimal for your individual horse.

Eleanor Kellon, VMD

About Dr. Kellon

Graduate of University of Pennsylvania Veterinary School. Owner of Equine Nutritional Solutions, www.drkellon.com, industry and private nutritional consultations, online nutritional courses. Staff Veterinary Expert at Uckele Health and Nutrition https://tinyurl.com/vdxfex5h .
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7 Responses to Deworming Strategy

  1. Karen says:

    I have heard of people feeding food grade diatomaceous earth daily as a dewormer. Is this an effective dewormer?

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  2. Dawn Willoughby says:

    Thank you as always. I used Horsemen’s Lab for years. Based on that history, I made an assumption that my horse was a low shedder, shared with vet and started just worming spring and fall with the wormers you mentioned.

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  3. Lauren Kirkman says:

    Dear Dr. Kellon,
    I just read your blurb on Worm Egg Counts and am hoping
    you can elaborate on why mail-in samples
    “are useless”? Many people I know in the UK,
    myself included, do so, this is the first time
    I have heard it’s validity questioned.

    Many thanks,
    Lauren

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  4. P.S.Conserva,VMD says:

    I have found parasitic resistance to various “medications” is still a regional situation. It is a shame that big pharma has not continued to develop and bring to market new and effective antiparasitic drugs. I have encouraged the daily chore of removing manure piles from paddocks and pastures in an effort to limit field exposure. FECs are still more effective than not. With the ease of purchase of horse dewormers and their indiscriminate use- I am afraid we are in for a period of time where diminishing returns will make it more difficult to control the migrating larval forms which cause so much internal damage. The incidence of more fatalities from colic may become worse than when I started practice in 1974. To add insult to injury I can see an erosion of confidence in some areas in veterinary counseling with respect to equine parasite management. Big Pharma has dropped the ball. Considering how we veterinarians for decades have embraced new drugs and advanced their acceptance and use only to be in many cases repositioned to compete in the market place on this topic with cheaper, less effective tools while profits have been substantial for corporate America.

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