2000
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-4017(00)00219-3
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Nematode parasites of adult dairy cattle in the Netherlands

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Cited by 75 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Such a pattern is known to occur in the Ostertagia-specific serum antibody level of pastured dairy cows (Agneesssens et al, 2000;Borgsteede et al, 2000) and follows the expected intake of infectious larvae. The antibody levels increase during the pasture season and decrease during the housing period, when most larvae are present in the form of inhibited L4 stages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Such a pattern is known to occur in the Ostertagia-specific serum antibody level of pastured dairy cows (Agneesssens et al, 2000;Borgsteede et al, 2000) and follows the expected intake of infectious larvae. The antibody levels increase during the pasture season and decrease during the housing period, when most larvae are present in the form of inhibited L4 stages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An obvious seasonal pattern in the Ostertagia-specific serum antibody level has been described (e.g. Agneesssens et al, 2000;Borgsteede et al, 2000). Seasonal differences could also occur in the Ostertagia-specific milk antibody level and affect the interpretation of the test results.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fecal egg counts have traditionally been utilized to identify and quantify infections, however, this test is plagued with false negatives, high variability between consecutive tests (low repeatability), and overall underestimation of the level of infection (Gross et al, 1999;Agneessens et al, 2000;Borgsteede et al, 2000;Eysker and Ploeger, 2000). Serum pepsinogen tests have had some success with quantifying levels of parasitism in first-season grazers, but were less reliable when used to quantify infections in adult cattle (Gross et al, 1999;Agneessens et al, 2000;Borgsteede et al, 2000). Unfortunately, the accuracy of the pepsinogen test depends on the current life cycle stages of the nematodes in the host (Berghen et al, 1993).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The correlation between the antibody responses to Cooperia and Ostertagia adult antigens are a reflection of the worm burden carried. It has been shown in New Zealand (Bisset & Marshall 1987) and in Europe Borgsteede et al 2000) that the burden of Ostertagia is more consistent than Cooperia.…”
Section: Herd Meansmentioning
confidence: 99%