- Thread starter
- #11
Thank you that is very good info. I'm not trying to be argumentative, I simply want to get to the bottom of this. I have no loyalty to ivermectin as a wormer, I simply dislike inconsistencies. For the most part I don't doubt these cases of worms despite treatment with Ivermectin (although the second thread potentially could illustrate a case of re-infection, since the ivermectin treatment was 4 months earlier). The main issue as I see it is that there are valid case studies proving the effectiveness of ivermectin on worms in poultry at the same time as these people—and yourself—are reporting cases of resistance.
I repeat, I don't care either way about wormers; I have levamisole, piperazine and flubenvet (my preference) at the ready. I just want to understand the discrepancy. Is the resistance just local or regional? How can poultry case studies with controls show upwards of 95% effectiveness while some people have chickens in their yards dying from worm infestations after ivermectin treatments? Do all medications have such wildly varying results? Are sunspots involved?
I repeat, I don't care either way about wormers; I have levamisole, piperazine and flubenvet (my preference) at the ready. I just want to understand the discrepancy. Is the resistance just local or regional? How can poultry case studies with controls show upwards of 95% effectiveness while some people have chickens in their yards dying from worm infestations after ivermectin treatments? Do all medications have such wildly varying results? Are sunspots involved?
