pyrantel-pamoate has been researched along with Ancylostomiasis* in 24 studies
1 review(s) available for pyrantel-pamoate and Ancylostomiasis
Article | Year |
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[Wakana disease].
Topics: Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Diagnosis, Differential; Humans; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Mebendazole; Necator americanus; Necatoriasis; Prognosis; Pyrantel Pamoate | 1999 |
2 trial(s) available for pyrantel-pamoate and Ancylostomiasis
Article | Year |
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Efficacy of ivermectin and pyrantel pamoate combined in a chewable formulation against heartworm, hookworm, and ascarid infections in dogs.
Eight trials were conducted in dogs to document the efficacy of ivermectin (6 micrograms/kg of body weight) and pyrantel pamoate (5 mg of active pyrantel/kg) in a beef-based chewable formulation against Dirofilaria immitis, Ancylostoma caninum, Uncinaria stenocephala, Toxocara canis, and Toxascaris leonina. Three studies involved induced infection with D immitis, and 5 studies involved induced or natural infection with hookworms and ascarids. In 3 intestinal parasite trials, the efficacy of the combination chewable tablet was compared with each of its components. Results indicated that 1 component did not interfere with the activity of the other. In 1 heartworm and 2 intestinal parasite trials, the efficacy of pyrantel, ivermectin/pyrantel combination, or ivermectin with pyrantel dosage of 10 mg/kg was evaluated. The ivermectin/pyrantel combination was 100% effective in preventing development of D immitis larvae. Efficacy of the combined product against T canis, Toxascaris leonina, A caninum, and U stenocephala was 90.1, 99.2, 98.5, and 98.7%, respectively. In the intestinal parasite trials, each individual component was found not to interfere with the anthelmintic action of the other. Increasing the dosage of pyrantel to 10 mg/kg (2 x that in the combination) did not interfere with the efficacy of ivermectin against heartworm or increase the activity of pyrantel against intestinal parasites. Topics: Administration, Oral; Ancylostomatoidea; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Dirofilariasis; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Drug Combinations; Female; Hookworm Infections; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Ivermectin; Male; Nematode Infections; Pyrantel Pamoate; Tablets; Toxocariasis | 1992 |
Comparative studies on the evaluation of the effect of new anthelminthics on various intestinal helminthiasis in Iran. Effects of anthelminthics on intestinal helminthiasis.
The effect of pyrantel pamoate, levamisole, mebendazole, thiabendazole and bephenium hydroxynaphthoate on various intestinal helminths were evaluated among the inhabitants of four villages in the Dezful area southwest of Iran. A total number of 328 persons, all infected simultaneously with Ascaris and hookworm (Ancylostoma duodenale) and 49.2% with Trichostrongylus spp., were randomly divided into six groups. One group was kept as the control and the other five were each treated with one compound. Follow-up examinations showed that all of the drugs used were highly effective on Ascaris, and the differences in the cure rate were not statistically significant except for bephenium hydroxynaphthoate which showed a lower cure rate. For hookworm, cure rates of 100, 90, and 85% were observed with levamisole, pyrantel pamoate and bephenium hydroxynaphthoate, respectively. Cure rates observed with mebendazole and thiabendazole were 35 and 51%, respectively. For Trichostrongylus, the highest cure rate was achieved with levamisole, followed by thiabendazole and mebendazole. While the percentage of people showing side-effects was rather low for all drugs, thiabendazole and bephenium hydroxynaphthoate produced a higher, and levamisole a lower, percentage of side effects. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Ancylostomiasis; Anthelmintics; Ascariasis; Bephenium Compounds; Child; Child, Preschool; Clinical Trials as Topic; Drug Evaluation; Feces; Follow-Up Studies; Helminthiasis; Humans; Infant; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Iran; Levamisole; Mebendazole; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate; Thiabendazole; Trichostrongylosis | 1977 |
21 other study(ies) available for pyrantel-pamoate and Ancylostomiasis
Article | Year |
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Ancylostoma ceylanicum hookworm infection in Japanese traveler who presented chronic diarrhea after return from Lao People's Democratic Republic.
Ancylostoma (A.) ceylanicum, one of the most common species of hookworms infecting dogs and cats, also causes patent infections in humans and is now considered to be the second most common hookworm species infecting populations in southeast Asia. A Japanese patient who returned from a visit to Thailand and Lao People's Democratic Republic (PDR) was presented with intermittent watery diarrhea with eosinophilia. Hookworm eggs were found in feces samples, and adult worms were confirmed to be present in the jejunum with capsule endoscopy and double balloon enteroscopy. A diagnosis of A. ceylanicum infection was made based on the morphology of the adult worms along with findings of a PCR-based molecular study using larvae obtained from a fecal sample culture. The infection was considered likely to have been obtained during a 1-month stay in a Laotian village, where the patient had eaten local food, worn sandals on bare feet, and lived as a local native villager, though he had stayed in modern hotels during the visit to Thailand. Topics: Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Capsule Endoscopy; Cats; Dogs; Double-Balloon Enteroscopy; Eosinophilia; Feces; Humans; Japan; Laos; Male; Middle Aged; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Pyrantel Pamoate; Travel | 2016 |
Activity of oxantel pamoate monotherapy and combination chemotherapy against Trichuris muris and hookworms: revival of an old drug.
It is widely recognized that only a handful of drugs are available against soil-transmitted helminthiasis, all of which are characterized by a low efficacy against Trichuris trichiura, when administered as single doses. The re-evaluation of old, forgotten drugs is a promising strategy to identify alternative anthelminthic drug candidates or drug combinations.. We studied the activity of the veterinary drug oxantel pamoate against Trichuris muris, Ancylostoma ceylanicum and Necator americanus in vitro and in vivo. In addition, the dose-effect of oxantel pamoate combined with albendazole, mebendazole, levamisole, pyrantel pamoate and ivermectin was studied against T. muris in vitro and additive or synergistic combinations were followed up in vivo.. We calculated an ED50 of 4.7 mg/kg for oxantel pamoate against T. muris in mice. Combinations of oxantel pamoate with pyrantel pamoate behaved antagonistically in vitro (combination index (CI) = 2.53). Oxantel pamoate combined with levamisole, albendazole or ivermectin using ratios based on their ED50s revealed antagonistic effects in vivo (CI = 1.27, 1.90 and 1.27, respectively). A highly synergistic effect (CI = 0.15) was observed when oxantel pamoate-mebendazole was administered to T. muris-infected mice. Oxantel pamoate (10 mg/kg) lacked activity against Ancylostoma ceylanicum and Necator americanus in vivo.. Our study confirms the excellent trichuricidal properties of oxantel pamoate. Since the drug lacks activity against hookworms it is necessary to combine oxantel pamoate with a partner drug with anti-hookworm properties. Synergistic effects were observed for oxantel pamoate-mebendazole, hence this combination should be studied in more detail. Since, of the standard drugs, albendazole has the highest efficacy against hookworms, additional investigations on the combination effect of oxantel pamoate-albendazole should be launched. Topics: Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Anthelmintics; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Synergism; Drug Therapy, Combination; Female; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Necator americanus; Necatoriasis; Parasitic Sensitivity Tests; Pyrantel Pamoate; Treatment Outcome; Trichuriasis; Trichuris | 2013 |
Phenotypic characterization of two Ancylostoma caninum isolates with different susceptibilities to the anthelmintic pyrantel.
The anthelmintic pyrantel plays an important role in the control of gastrointestinal helminths of humans and domestic animals. Despite the demonstration of pyrantel resistance in several helminth species over the last 20 years, the resistance mechanism remains unclear. It has been hypothesized that resistance may arise as a consequence of changes to the relative proportions of subpopulations of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAchRs). To test this hypothesis, we examined the responses of two isolates of the canine hookworm Ancylostoma caninum with low-level resistance (isolate NT) and high-level resistance (isolate PR) to pyrantel to nicotinic agonist drugs reported to be selective for three nAchR subtypes. We used larval motility and conformation assays and force transduction experiments with adult worms. Pyrantel and levamisole were less potent against larvae of isolate PR than larvae of isolate NT (up to an 18-fold increase in the 50% inhibitory concentration); on the other hand, bephenium was more potent against larvae of isolate PR than larvae of isolate NT (twofold) and nicotine had the same potency against larvae of both isolates. In adults, pyrantel, levamisole, and nicotine were less potent against isolate PR than isolate NT (two- to threefold), but the potency of bephenium against the two isolates was equivalent. Our data indicate a complex pattern of nAchRs in this species and suggest that the two isolates differ in their relative sensitivities to agonists targeting different nAchRs. Topics: Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Bephenium Compounds; Dogs; Drug Resistance; Female; Humans; Larva; Levamisole; Nicotine; Nicotinic Agonists; Phenotype; Pyrantel; Receptors, Nicotinic | 2008 |
Anthelmintic efficacy against tissue-arrested larvae of Ancylostoma caninum in murine hosts.
Third-stage larvae of the major human and canine Ancylostoma hookworm species have the capacity to undergo developmental arrest in the somatic tissues of an infected host. Arrested larvae reactivate at opportune periods such as pregnancy, which results in the transmammary transmission of infection to the nursing neonates. Using murine paratenic hosts to focus specifically on tissue-arrested stages of Ancylostoma caninum, the present study found that neither recommended nor elevated doses of commonly used anthelmintics were effective in eliminating latent infections at the accepted standard of greater than 90% reduction in parasite burden. Of the drugs tested, i.e., pyrantel, fenbendazole, ivermectin, and milbemycin, ivermectin was the most effective and engendered an 80% reduction in the burden of tissue-arrested A. caninum larvae but only if administered repeatedly or at elevated doses. Studies in 2 inbred mouse strains, BALB/c (H-2b) and C57BL/6 (H-2d), that typically display divergent immune responses to various infections showed no significant differences in the efficacies of the drugs tested. The results of this study indicate that there is still a need for effective strategies of eradicating latent infections with tissue-arrested hookworm larvae. Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antinematodal Agents; Disease Models, Animal; Dogs; Female; Fenbendazole; Humans; Ivermectin; Macrolides; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Pyrantel Pamoate; Random Allocation | 1998 |
Efficacy of an ivermectin and pyrantel pamoate combination against adult hookworm, Ancylostoma braziliense, in dogs.
A chewable tablet incorporating ivermectin and pyrantel was tested in 12 Beagle dogs for efficacy against the adult hookworm, Ancylostoma braziliense. The dogs were administered infective larvae of A braziliense orally. Twenty-one days after infection the dogs were weighed and allocated randomly to receive either an oral treatment with ivermectin and pyrantel in a beef-based chewable tablet or no treatment. The chewable tablet was a commercially available product, which was made to deliver ivermectin at 6 micrograms/kg and pyrantel at 5.0 mg/kg to each dog. Seven days after treatment the dogs were euthanased, necropsied, and examined for adult hookworms. At necropsy, no adult A braziliense was observed in any of the 6 treated dogs and all 6 dogs that had been left untreated were infected with adult A braziliense (range, 48 to 161). It was concluded that this combination product is 100% efficacious against adult A braziliense. Topics: Administration, Oral; Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Antiparasitic Agents; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Drug Therapy, Combination; Feces; Female; Intestine, Small; Ivermectin; Male; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate; Random Allocation | 1996 |
Pathogenicity of the hookworm, Ancylostoma pluridentatum, in a Florida panther (Felis concolor coryi) kitten.
We evaluated clinical signs and administered anthelmintic treatment to a wild-caught, captive Florida panther (Felis concolor coryi) kitten from Big Cypress National Preserve, Florida (USA) infected with the hookworm, Ancylostoma pluridentatum. Clinical signs observed included poor body condition, lethargy, and below normal red blood cell numbers, hemoglobin concentration, and packed cell volume, and elevated eosinophil numbers. In addition, a maximum of 936 Ancylostoma sp. eggs/g of feces were found on Day 11 of captivity. Following oral administration of 20 mg/kg pyrantel pamoate on Day 11, 26 A. pluridentatum were collected from the feces. Based on the resolution of clinical signs, cessation of egg shedding, and a return to normal hematologic values following anthelmintic treatment, we believe that infection with A. pluridentatum was the primary cause of the stressed conditions in the panther kitten. Topics: Administration, Oral; Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Carnivora; Eosinophils; Erythrocyte Count; Erythrocyte Indices; Feces; Female; Florida; Hematocrit; Hemoglobins; Leukocyte Count; Male; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate | 1994 |
[Field studies on different control schemes for hookworm infection].
Three different control schemes including selective chemotherapy, a combination of selective chemotherapy and management of fecal disposal and mass treatment with mebendazole-medicated salt were implemented for the control of hookworm infection in Luwo Town and Taiping Village, Wuming County, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region during 1971-1990. Through ten years of selective chemotherapy, the results showed that the hookworm infection rate dropped from 42.6% to 3.9% and the infection intensity from 425.6 eggs per gram faeces to 1.6 eggs per gram faeces. After seven years of selective chemotherapy combined with management of fecal, the hookworm infection rate dropped from 58.7% to 10.9% and the infection intensity from 111.5 eggs per gram faeces to 8.5 eggs per gram faeces. However, 3 years after the termination of the combined treatment, the hookworm infection rate increased to 14.5%. As for the implementation of the third scheme, mebendazole-medicated salt was given at 100 mg daily for 30 consecutive days or at 50 mg daily for 30 consecutive days. Stool examination was made one year after the treatment, the results showed that the infection rate of the inhabitants dropped from 36% and 36% to 2% and 1.3%, respectively, and the infection intensity dropped from 110.3 and 246 eggs per gram faeces to 1.3 and 0.24 eggs per gram faeces. After three years, the infection rate of inhabitants remained under 2% and the infection intensity under 1 egg per gram faeces. It was concluded that mass treatment with mebendazole-medicated salt might be the most practical scheme for the control of hookworm infection. Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Bephenium Compounds; Humans; Levamisole; Mebendazole; Necator americanus; Necatoriasis; Pyrantel Pamoate | 1993 |
Efficacy of an ivermectin/pyrantel pamoate chewable formulation against the canine hookworms, Uncinaria stenocephala and Ancylostoma caninum.
The effectiveness of the combination of pyrantel pamoate (5 mg kg-1) and ivermectin (6 micrograms kg-1) against the canine hookworms Uncinaria stenocephala and Ancylostoma caninum was determined. This combination is intended for monthly use as a heartworm preventative and for treatment and control of canine hookworms. The formulation was found to be effective (99.6% reduction in worm burdens) against both species of hookworms in experimentally infected dogs. No adverse effects due to the drug combination were observed in any dog during the course of this study. Topics: Administration, Oral; Ancylostoma; Ancylostomatoidea; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Drug Combinations; Feces; Female; Hookworm Infections; Ivermectin; Male; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate; Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms | 1992 |
Evaluation of a beef-based chewable formulation of pyrantel pamoate against induced and natural infections of hookworms and ascarids in dogs.
Pyrantel pamoate, formulated in a beef-based chewable tablet, was evaluated for efficacy in dogs against induced and natural infections of Toxocara canis, Toxascaris leonina, Ancylostoma caninum and Uncinaria stenocephala. Dose titration trials were conducted in Canada, the UK and Germany in dogs treated with pyrantel (as pamoate salt) at 0, 2.5, 5 or 10 mg kg-1 body weight. These studies showed that a dose rate of 2.5 mg kg-1, the efficacy of pyrantel against adult T. canis, T. leonina, U. stenocephala and A. caninum was 76.1, 85.6, 100 and 87.9%, respectively. Efficacy at 5 mg kg-1 against the same parasites was 94.2, 92.0, 93.5 and 93.8%, respectively, and at 10 mg kg-1 efficacy was 91.2, 97.6, 98.7 and 91.3%, respectively. No adverse effects due to treatment were seen in any of these trials. Topics: Administration, Oral; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Nematode Infections; Pyrantel Pamoate; Toxocariasis | 1991 |
[A case report of a patient repeatedly infected with Ancylostoma duodenale, probably from himself through his artificial anus, and resistant against a single dose of pyrantel pamoate].
A 88 year old Japanese male was repeatedly infected with Ancyclostoma duodenale. He underwent an artificial anus operation about 55 years ago. He appeared to be infected with hookworm earlier than in 1977 and developed severe anemia. Though he was treated with pyrantel pamoate and mebendazole several times, reinfections developed in each time. A possible origin for his reinfections was his own feces defecated through his artificial anus. Unsanitary handling of the anus and the feces exposed himself to oral or percutaneous infection. Besides, a single dose of pyrantel pamoate, usually very effective against Ancylostoma duodenale, was not so effective in this patient. Therefore, we prescribed multiple doses of pyrantel pamoate, and followed by a single dose of mebendazole. However, reinfections still persisted because of his unsanitary behavior. Topics: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Ancylostomiasis; Colostomy; Drug Resistance; Humans; Male; Pyrantel Pamoate; Recurrence | 1991 |
The efficacy of pyrantel pamoate against ascarids and hookworms in cats.
The purposes of this study were to evaluate pyrantel pamoate administered orally at 20 mg/kg body weight for the removal of induced or natural infections of Ancylostoma tubaeformae and Toxocara cati in cats and to compare the efficacy of paste (40 mg base/g) and granule (80 mg base/g) formulations. Thirty cats of mixed breeding and various ages with natural and/or induced infections of A. tubaeformae and T. cati were assigned to one of three treatment groups: (1) non-medicated controls; (2) paste formulation at 20 mg base/kg; or (3) granule formulation at 20 mg base/kg. Infections were induced by feeding the cats on carcasses of infected mice. The study was conducted in replicates of at least one animal per treatment per replicate. The study parameters included clinical observations, physical examinations, faecal egg counts and the numbers, species and stages of worms recovered at necropsy. The paste formulation was 99.3% and 99.7% effective in reducing egg counts of Ancylostoma sp. and Toxocara sp. respectively. The granule formulation was 97.7% and 99.9% effective in reducing faecal egg counts of Ancylostoma sp. and Toxocara sp. respectively. When administered in paste form, pyrantel pamoate was 99.5% effective in removing adult Ancylostoma and 100.0% effective against adult Toxocara. The granule formulation was 97.9% effective against Ancylostoma and 100% effective against Toxocara. No toxic effects of either formulation of the drug were noted. Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Cat Diseases; Cats; Feces; Female; Male; Ointments; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate; Toxocariasis | 1991 |
Evaluation of the efficacy and safety of two formulations of pyrantel pamoate in cats.
The efficacy of paste and granule formulations of pyrantel pamoate against concurrent infections of Toxocara cati and Ancylostoma tubaeforme in cats was examined in a controlled trial. Three groups of 8 cats received either no medication (controls) or pyrantel pamoate in paste or granule formulations at a dosage of 20 mg/kg of body weight. After administration of the paste formulation, fecal egg counts of A tubaeforme and T cati were decreased by 98.6 and 96.4%, respectively, and 100% of hookworms and 93.5% of ascarids were removed from the intestine. After administration of the granule formulation, fecal egg counts of A tubaeforme and T cati were decreased by 99.4 and 78.2%, respectively, and 100% of adult hookworms and 88.9% of ascarids were removed. All reductions of egg counts and worm numbers were significant (P less than 0.01). The clinical safety of pyrantel pamoate was evaluated in 4- to 6-week-old kittens. Three groups of 10 kittens received either no medication (controls) or pyrantel pamoate in paste or granule formulations at the rate of 100 mg/kg for 3 consecutive days. Adverse effects were not observed in young kittens following administration of the high dose of pyrantel pamoate. Topics: Administration, Oral; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Cat Diseases; Cats; Chemistry, Pharmaceutical; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel; Pyrantel Pamoate; Risk Factors; Toxocariasis | 1990 |
Acquired immunity to Ancylostoma ceylanicum in hamsters.
A laboratory model of acquired immunity to human hookworm is described. Significant resistance to challenge infection with Ancylostoma ceylanicum was elicited in mature DSN hamsters. The serum and mucosal antibody responses were investigated in both quantitative and qualitative terms and changes associated with immunity were identified. Marked differences in numbers of mast and goblet cells in the small intestine were also recorded and related to the immune status of the host. Topics: Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Antibodies, Helminth; Blotting, Western; Body Weight; Cell Count; Cricetinae; Disease Models, Animal; Immunity; Immunization; Intestinal Mucosa; Intestine, Small; Male; Mast Cells; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate | 1990 |
An investigation of hookworm infection and reinfection following mass anthelmintic treatment in the south Indian fishing community of Vairavankuppam.
Hookworm infections, as assessed by counting worms expelled following anthelmintic treatment and by egg output, were found to be of low prevalence and intensity in a South Indian fishing community. The initial overall prevalence of infection in the community was 43%, and the average burden was estimated at 2.2 hookworms per person. The age profiles of prevalence and intensity differed between males and females, with the latter harbouring significantly higher levels of infection. Children of both sexes under 10 years of age rarely harboured hookworms. Treatment with pyrantel pamoate was estimated to be 91% effective in clearing hookworm infections. Egg counts made on stools collected during an 11-month period of reinfection indicated that female patients became reinfected soon after treatment, while little hookworm egg excretion was observed in males during the observation period following treatment. Females acquired a significantly higher number of worms during the reinfection period compared with males, although the average burden in females reached only 28% of the initial, pre-treatment level. The hookworm population consisted of predominantly Necator americanus, and less than 10% of Ancylostoma duodenale. The parasites were highly aggregated within the host population with 10% of the community harbouring over 65% of the total hookworms. Low values of the negative binomial aggregation parameter, k, (indicating extreme over-dispersion) were recorded in groups stratified by age and sex. Highly significant positive correlations were observed between the initial (pre-treatment) and reinfection worm burdens of female (but not of male) patients. It is suggested that occupational practices related to walking through areas contaminated with hookworm larvae play an important role in generating the observed patterns of infection within this community. Topics: Adult; Age Factors; Ancylostoma; Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Child; Child, Preschool; Disease Susceptibility; Feces; Female; Humans; India; Male; Middle Aged; Necator; Necatoriasis; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel; Pyrantel Pamoate; Recurrence | 1988 |
[Experimental therapeutic efficacy of a new anti-hookworm drug, tribendimidin].
Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Anthelmintics; Cricetinae; Dogs; Necatoriasis; Nematode Infections; Nippostrongylus; Phenylenediamines; Pyrantel Pamoate; Rats | 1987 |
[Imported ancylostomiasis: incidence, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment].
Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Antinematodal Agents; Benzimidazoles; Humans; Pyrantel Pamoate; Serologic Tests | 1986 |
Anthelmintic efficacy of pyrantel pamoate against the roundworm, Toxocara canis, and the hookworm, ancylostoma caninum, in dogs.
Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Ascariasis; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Pyrantel; Pyrantel Pamoate; Toxocariasis | 1978 |
Ecological control of hookworm and strongyloidiasis.
Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Brazil; Ecology; Humans; Pyrantel Pamoate; Strongyloidiasis; Thiabendazole | 1977 |
[Diagnosis and treatment of intestinal nematode infections in migrants from Surinam].
Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Ancylostomiasis; Anthelmintics; Ascariasis; Child; Female; Fumarates; Humans; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Male; Mebendazole; Nematode Infections; Netherlands; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate; Strongyloidiasis; Suriname; Thiabendazole; Trichuriasis | 1976 |
Pyrantel pamoate in the treatment of ancylostomiasis.
Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Ancylostomiasis; Child; Child, Preschool; Humans; Infant; Middle Aged; Pyrantel; Pyrantel Pamoate | 1976 |
Drug evaluation of pyrantel pamoate against Ancylostoma, Toxocara, and Toxascaris in eleven dogs.
Eleven dogs dosed at approximately the recommended rate of 1.029 mg of pyrantel pamoate/kg of body weight were used. The efficacy against Ancylostoma in the 11 dogs was 99% (av; min-max, 94-99%). In 4 dogs with both Toxocara and Ancylostoma, average efficacy against Toxocara was 96%, and in 5 dogs with both Toxoscaris and Ancylostoma, efficacy against Toxascaris was 93%. Only 2 dogs of the 11 were infected with the 3 species; the average efficacy was 90%. There appeared to be no activity against the Trichuris found in one dog and the Dipylidium found in another. Treated dogs did not vomit or have other noticeable ill effects. Topics: Ancylostomiasis; Animals; Ascariasis; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Nematode Infections; Pyrantel; Pyrantel Pamoate; Toxocariasis | 1975 |