The study or the pdf?Is that from/for the USA @casportpony?
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The study or the pdf?Is that from/for the USA @casportpony?
I love that article!Here's a TMI article that some (like me) might find interesting. It's from 2015 so I'm not sure it's entirely up-to-date but it seems that Ivermectin is not approved for use in laying hens.
https://vet.osu.edu/sites/vet.osu.edu/files/documents/extension/Egg residue considerations during the treatment of backyard poultry 2015.pdf
Never mind......was looking then typing too fast without thinking first.The study or the pdf?
She's probably right about internal parasites. I've used ivermectin to treat scaley leg mites in mine, but it might not work for everyone.The vet said Eprinex would not treat the scaly leg mite or internal parasites, and I did not think to ask about red mite. I see on this thread information to the contrary. Does anyone know for sure?
All kinds of opinions on egg withdrawal. Your vet says 7 days, someone else's says 14 days, and a vet on a FB page says 8 weeks. I think my vet would probably say 4 weeks.The vet also said a 7day withholding period for eggs, again contrary to advice here.
And I did not ask her about when to do a repeat treatment for when new eggs hatch - anyone know about this?
Studies conducted in California flocks showed that 90% of the parasites were on 10% of the birds within the same flock.As I did them it became evident only a few chooks had eggs on the fluff around their feather bases, most had nothing visible.
Did you find anything specific to poultry?I don't know what Eprinex is. But I think Ivermectin is a bovine dewormer. Of course not all wormers treat all worms. So knowing your enemy AND your drug is key. But I'm not about to let things slide by me when I have google just as much as anyone else!
What I found regarding the eprinex on a goverment website..
https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/archives/fdaDrugInfo.cfm?archiveid=26950
"When used according to label directions, neither a pre-slaughter drug withdrawal period nor a milk discard time is required, therefore, meat and milk from cattle treated with IVOMEC EPRINEX (eprinomectin) Pour-On may be used for human consumption at any time following treatment."
https://www.drugs.com/vet/ivomec-eprinex-pour-on-for-beef-and-dairy-cattle.html
"Residue Information: When used according to label directions, neither a pre-slaughter drug withdrawal period nor a milk discard time is required, therefore, meat and milk from cattle treated with IVOMEC EPRINEX (eprinomectin) Pour-On may be used for human consumption at any time following treatment.
Do not use in calves intended for veal or unapproved animal species as severe adverse reaction, including fatalities in dogs, may result."
Looks like it will treat round worm and lung worm as far as internal parasites.