Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
The application of faecal egg count results and statistical inference for clinical decision making in foals.
- Journal:
- Veterinary parasitology
- Year:
- 2019
- Authors:
- Wilkes, E J A et al.
- Affiliation:
- School of Animal & Veterinary Sciences · United Kingdom
- Species:
- horse
Abstract
This study investigated the impact of variability in Parascaris spp. and strongyle faecal egg counts (FEC) from foals on treatment decision-making and detection of a patent infection. A single faecal sample was collected once daily for three days from 53 foals and a FEC was performed on three separate portions of each sample (total of nine egg counts per foal). Differences in the decision to administer an anthelmintic using the results of a single count (C), the mean of three (X¯) or nine counts (X¯) and the upper 5% confidence limit of the gamma confidence interval (CI) of the estimate of the distribution mean (μ) from three (UCL) and nine counts (UCL) were determined for a range of egg count thresholds. The UCLwas used as the best estimate of μ, hypothesis testing for treatment and the comparison of treatment decision-making using C, X¯, X¯and UCL. The results of this study demonstrated that a point estimate (Cor X¯) was of limited value for estimating the distribution mean of egg counts in faeces and there was overall poor agreement in treatment decision-making for individual foals using Ccompared with UCL. Of the foals with Cof zero eggs per gram, 54% and 47% had Parascaris and strongyle eggs in subsequent counts, respectively. The egg density in faeces is inhomogeneous, resulting in considerable variability in egg count results for an individual foal: between faecal piles, different portions of a faecal pile and days. The use of the negative binomial distribution CI for μ takes this variability into account and is recommended for use when interpreting FEC data from horses.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31213242/