Relative egg extraction efficiencies of manual and automated fecal egg count methods in equines.
Fecal egg count
Imagyst
McMaster
Parasight
Wisconsin
mini-FLOTAC
Journal
Helminthologia
ISSN: 0440-6605
Titre abrégé: Helminthologia
Pays: Germany
ID NLM: 0043764
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Mar 2024
Mar 2024
Historique:
received:
12
12
2023
accepted:
18
02
2024
medline:
25
4
2024
pubmed:
25
4
2024
entrez:
25
4
2024
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
The World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology recently released new recommendations for the design of fecal egg count (FEC) reduction tests for livestock. These provide suggestions as to the number of animals to be sampled and the minimum number of eggs that must be counted to produce statistically meaningful results. One of the considerations for study design is the multiplication factor of the FEC method to be used; methods with lower multiplication factors require fewer animals to be sampled because they are presumed to count more eggs per test. However, multiplication factor is not the sole determinant of the number of eggs counted by any given method, since different techniques use very different sample extraction methodologies that could affect the number of eggs detected beyond just the amount of feces examined. In this light, we compared three commonly used manual FEC methods (mini-FLOTAC, McMaster and Wisconsin) and two automated methods (Imagyst and Parasight All-in-One) with respect to how many equine strongylid and ascarid eggs they counted in the same samples. McMaster and mini-FLOTAC (multiplication factors of 25x and 5x, respectively) produced the most accurate results of the methods tested but mini-FLOTAC counted approximately 5-times more eggs than McMaster. However, Wisconsin and Parasight (multiplication factor = 1x) counted 3-times more ova than mini-FLOTAC, which was less than the 5-fold difference in their multiplication factors. As a result, these tests perform with multiplication factors more akin to 1.6x relative to mini-FLOTAC. Imagyst, due to its unique sample preparation methodology, does not have a traditional multiplication factor but performed similarly to McMaster with respect to egg recovery.
Identifiants
pubmed: 38659463
doi: 10.2478/helm-2024-0007
pii: helm-2024-0007
pmc: PMC11038241
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Pagination
20-29Informations de copyright
© 2024 L. Britton et al., published by Sciendo.