The results demonstrate that creating a reservoir of unselected parasites slows the development of anthelmintic resistance, and emphasises the risk of treating all animals prior to a shift on to low-contamination pasture. However, higher levels of pasture contamination, resulting from untreated animals, indicate the difficulty in managing both worm control and resistance.
Drenching strategies for lambs designed to slow the development of anthelmintic resistance, by increasing the pool of susceptible worms available to dilute resistant survivors after treatment, resulted in increased numbers of H. contortus and T. colubriformis but not other species of parasite on pasture. The increased parasite challenge to lambs in the autumn was associated with small production losses, which may be acceptable to farmers wishing to implement such strategies. It is clear that further work is required on the interaction between management practices and the population dynamics of parasites, especially with regard to creating pools of susceptible genotypes to slow the development of drench resistance.
Untreated adult ewes were a source of unselected genotypes, capable of slowing the development of anthelmintic resistance in most, but not all, parasite species. Further, the potential of adult ewes to remove from pasture more parasite larvae than they contribute through faecal contamination indicates a potentially useful role in suppressing parasite populations, particularly when worm control in lambs is less effective as a result of anthelmintic resistance.
Alterations in midsagittal corpus callosum (CC) area and morphology have been suggested in several disease processes of the nervous system. In addition, some studies found a relation of CC area to handedness, language dominance, and gender. The relation of CC area to measures of intelligence and memory and the effect of epilepsy on CC area have received less attention. In this study CC area was measured on midsagittal magnetic resonance images in 48 patients undergoing presurgical evaluation of epilepsy and in 20 control subjects. All patients had the Wada test and formal neuropsychological testing. The mean CC area of the epilepsy group was significantly smaller than that of control subjects (p < 0.00001). CC area showed a positive correlation with presurgical performance IQ (p = 0.008) and full-scale IQ (p = 0.048), but not with memory scores or language dominance. There was no relation of CC area to location of epileptic focus, seizure types, age at onset, epilepsy duration, or etiology. The presence of an atrophic lesion was associated with a smaller CC area. The correlation of total CC area with performance and full-scale IQs may reflect axonal loss in patients with a low IQ resulting from the etiology of epilepsy or the epilepsy itself.
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