Abonyi Festus Otaka, Njoga Emmanuel Okechukwu
1Department of Veterinary Animal Health and Production, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State Nigeria.
2Department of Veterinary Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State Nigeria.
J Parasit Dis. 2020 Mar;44(1):31-39. doi: 10.1007/s12639-019-01158-8. Epub 2019 Sep 5.
Gastrointestinal parasite (GIP) infection in pigs constrains swine production and enhances dissemination of zoonotic parasites, especially in the tropics. Therefore, an epidemiological study to determine prevalence and risk factors of GIP infection in intensively managed pigs in Nsukka, was conducted. Faecal samples from 1400 pigs, randomly collected from 40 farms, were examined for GIP eggs following standard protocol. Data on involvement of pig farmers in risk practices that enhance endoparasitic infection in piggeries were obtained using structured questionnaire. Overall prevalence of 80% (32/40) and 28.6% (400/1400) were recorded at farm and individual pig levels, respectively. Prevalence of 25.3% (138/546), 30.7% (262/854), 30.4% (310/1020) and 23.7% (90/380) were obtained for male, female, young (< 1 year) and adult (≥ 1 year) pigs, respectively. Epidemiological factors (sex, age, season, farm location and flock size) were significantly ( < 0.05) associated with worm infestations. Worm eggs identified and their prevalence were: Strongyles 25.7% (360/1400), 11.4% (160/1400), 0.7% (10/1400) and mixed infections (Strongyles and 9.3% (130/1400). Major risk factors found were feeding of self-compounded on-farm feed, non-disinfection of pen and equipment, rearing pigs of different ages together, infrequent removal of dungs, early weaning at less than 6 weeks and non-availability of routine deworming programme. The overall prevalence at farm and individual pig levels were high; and involvement of farmers in the risk practices was massive. Therefore, cost-effective control of GIP infestations in pig in the study area is imperative; to boost pig production and minimize risk of transmission of zoonotic parasites.
猪胃肠道寄生虫(GIP)感染制约着养猪业发展,并加剧了人畜共患寄生虫的传播,在热带地区尤为如此。因此,开展了一项流行病学研究,以确定Nsukka地区集约化养殖猪群中GIP感染的流行情况和风险因素。按照标准方案,对从40个猪场随机采集的1400头猪的粪便样本进行了GIP虫卵检测。通过结构化问卷获取了养猪户参与可能增加猪场体内寄生虫感染风险行为的数据。在猪场和个体猪层面,总体感染率分别为80%(32/40)和28.6%(400/1400)。公猪、母猪、幼猪(<1岁)和成年猪(≥1岁)的感染率分别为25.3%(138/546)、30.7%(262/854)、30.4%(310/1020)和23.7%(90/380)。流行病学因素(性别、年龄、季节、猪场位置和猪群规模)与蠕虫感染显著相关(<0.05)。鉴定出的蠕虫卵及其感染率分别为:圆线虫25.7%(360/1400)、类圆线虫11.4%(160/1400)、鞭虫0.7%(10/1400)以及混合感染(圆线虫和类圆线虫)9.3%(130/1400)。发现的主要风险因素包括投喂农场自制饲料、猪舍和设备未消毒、不同年龄猪混养、粪便清理不频繁、6周龄前过早断奶以及没有常规驱虫计划。猪场和个体猪层面的总体感染率都很高;养殖户大量参与风险行为。因此,必须在研究区域对猪的GIP感染进行经济有效的控制,以促进养猪生产并降低人畜共患寄生虫传播风险。