pyrantel-pamoate and Enterobiasis

pyrantel-pamoate has been researched along with Enterobiasis* in 12 studies

Reviews

2 review(s) available for pyrantel-pamoate and Enterobiasis

ArticleYear
[Pinworm infection (enterobiasis)].
    Ryoikibetsu shokogun shirizu, 1999, Issue:24 Pt 2

    Topics: Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Humans; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Mebendazole; Pyrantel Pamoate

1999
Pyrantel pamoate for pinworm infestation.
    American pharmacy, 1993, Volume: NS33, Issue:2

    Topics: Enterobiasis; Humans; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate

1993

Trials

1 trial(s) available for pyrantel-pamoate and Enterobiasis

ArticleYear
Ivermectin failure in the control of Oxyuris equi in a herd of ponies in France.
    Veterinary parasitology, 2016, Oct-15, Volume: 229

    Drug resistance in equine gastro-intestinal parasitic nematodes has been reported throughout the world. While the focus is usually put on cyathostomins, observations of macrocylic lactone failure against Oxyuris equi have accumulated over the last decade. Here we report the failure of ivermectin in the control of O. equi in an experimental Welsh pony herd. In a first trial, 6 ponies previously drenched with moxidectin and showing patent O. equi infections were administered ivermectin and subsequently monitored for O. equi egg excretion over one month. This trial demonstrated a failure of ivermectin to control O. equi egg excretion as half of ponies demonstrated recurrent egg excretion in the peri-anal region during 21days after treatment. One year later, six female Welsh ponies drenched with moxidectin demonstrated signs of itching and scratching in their peri-anal region with worms being found transiently in fecal materials three weeks later. Ponies were allocated to three treatment groups, i.e. ivermectin, pyrantel embonate and fenbendazole and monitored for egg excretion over five weeks. Fenbendazole and pyrantel embonate broke ivermectin suboptimal efficacy as soon as 8 and 14days respectively after treatment, while egg excretion remained constant throughout the 41-day long trial in the ivermectin-treated ponies. This is the first report of ivermectin failure against O. equi in France. In the absence of critical efficacy test, it remains unclear whether true resistance is at stake or if these observations confound a constitutive suboptimal efficacy of ivermectin against O. equi.

    Topics: Animals; Anthelmintics; Drug Resistance; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Female; Fenbendazole; France; Horse Diseases; Horses; Ivermectin; Pyrantel Pamoate

2016

Other Studies

9 other study(ies) available for pyrantel-pamoate and Enterobiasis

ArticleYear
Effects of anthelmintics on the pinworm Blatticola blattae in laboratory-reared German cockroaches Blattella germanica.
    Parasitology research, 2020, Volume: 119, Issue:9

    The efficacy of pyrantel pamoate, pyrvinium pamoate, ivermectin, and piperazine citrate against pinworm in cockroach was evaluated. Laboratory-reared German cockroaches naturally infected with Blatticola blattae were treated with the anthelmintics and necropsied at 3 to 35 days after treatment. Ivermectin at over 5 ppm and piperazine citrate at over 2000 ppm killed all the treated cockroaches. Pinworms were still detected in cockroaches given lower concentration of the aforementioned drugs. Administration of pyrantel pamoate (100-1000 ppm) and pyrvinium pamoate (2000 ppm) did not kill the cockroaches, and no pinworms were detected at 3 and 17 days after treatment. Thus, pyrantel pamoate and pyrvinium pamoate were found to be effective for deworming B. blattae in the German cockroaches, without causing mortality for the host. Our results showed that anthelmintics selection is essential for eradication of pinworms in cockroaches because of the toxicity for the host such as ivermectin or piperazine citrate. This is the first report of piperazine citrate toxicity in cockroaches.

    Topics: Animals; Anthelmintics; Cockroaches; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Humans; Ivermectin; Piperazines; Pyrantel Pamoate

2020
Unusual colonoscopic view of Enterobius vermicularis.
    Internal medicine (Tokyo, Japan), 2011, Volume: 50, Issue:6

    Topics: Adult; Animals; Colonoscopy; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Female; Humans; Male; Pyrantel Pamoate

2011
[Albendazole in Japanese juvenile with enterobiasis in whom pyrantel pamoate is not effective].
    Kansenshogaku zasshi. The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases, 2011, Volume: 85, Issue:5

    A 18-year-old Japanese woman seen as an outpatient for refractory enterobiasis had been treated with pyrantel pamoate over 40 times since the age of 11. She washed her hands and cleaned house frequently, and all family members took pyrantel pamoate, but Enterobius vermicularis eggs remained. She was orally administered 400 mg of albendazole 3 times in clinic visits, after which eggs have not been seen for 1 year. Pyrantel pamoate is used widely against enterobiasis in Japan. Our case shows albendazole to also be effective against enterobiasis. Albendazole thus appears to be a useful anti-helminthic in enterobiasis patients in whom pyrantel pamoate is not effective. This is, to our knowledge, the first case of enterobiasis treated with albendazole in Japan.

    Topics: Adolescent; Albendazole; Anthelmintics; Antinematodal Agents; Enterobiasis; Female; Humans; Pyrantel Pamoate; Treatment Failure

2011
Efficacy of pyrantel pamoate and ivermectin paste formulations against naturally acquired Oxyuris equi infections in horses.
    Veterinary parasitology, 2010, Jul-15, Volume: 171, Issue:1-2

    In recent years, numerous veterinary practitioners have reported anecdotal episodes in which anthelmintic treatment did not appear to deliver the expected efficacy against equine pinworms (Oxyuris equi). Anthelmintic resistance has not been demonstrated formally in equine pinworms, so a clinical study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of paste formulations of pyrantel pamoate or ivermectin against naturally acquired infections with O. equi. Twenty-one horses (>4 months to 15 years of age) with patent, naturally acquired pinworm infections were blocked by source of origin and allocated randomly to one of three treatment groups: horses (n=7) assigned to Group 1 were treated orally with pyrantel pamoate paste at a dosage of 13.2 mg/kg (2x label dosage), Group 2 horses (n=7) were untreated controls, and horses (n=7) assigned to Group 3 were treated orally with ivermectin paste at a dosage of 200 microg/kg. Fourteen days after treatment, horses were euthanatized, necropsied, and large intestinal contents were processed for recovery of adult pinworms. In addition, duplicate 1% aliquots of intestinal contents from the cecum, ventral colon, dorsal colon, and small colon were collected, preserved, and examined for recovery and enumeration of fourth-stage larval O. equi. Anthelmintic efficacy against pinworms was evaluated by comparing the post-treatment worm counts of Groups 1 and 3 to those of control animals. Mean numbers of O. equi adults recovered postmortem were significantly decreased by both pyrantel pamoate (P=0.0366) and ivermectin (P=0.0137) treatment, with respective efficacies of 91.2% and 96.0%. In addition, both products demonstrated >99% efficacy against fourth-stage O. equi larvae. The current study demonstrated acceptable adulticidal and larvicidal efficacy of both pyrantel pamoate and ivermectin paste formulations against O. equi and did not support the existence of macrocyclic lactone or pyrimidine resistance in the pinworm populations evaluated.

    Topics: Administration, Oral; Animals; Anthelmintics; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Feces; Gastrointestinal Diseases; Horse Diseases; Horses; Ivermectin; Least-Squares Analysis; Parasite Egg Count; Pyrantel Pamoate; Random Allocation; Single-Blind Method

2010
Pinning down pinworms.
    Nursing, 2006, Volume: 36, Issue:5

    Topics: Adult; Antinematodal Agents; Child; Enterobiasis; Humans; Infection Control; Mebendazole; Patient Education as Topic; Pyrantel Pamoate

2006
Effects of repeated anthelmintic treatment on Enterobius vermicularis infection in chimpanzees.
    The Journal of parasitology, 2005, Volume: 91, Issue:3

    Effects of repeated treatment with pyrantel pamoate on Enterobius vermicularis infection in chimpanzees were assessed by observing worms discharged in the feces after administration of anthelmintic treatment. Three of 9 chimpanzees reared in a zoological garden in Japan were subjected to fecal worm count and morphometric observation, and all were given oral pyrantel pamoate 6 times at 10-day intervals simultaneously. Following the first and second treatments, more than 30,000 pinworms were discharged from 1 chimpanzee. The number of discharged worms abruptly decreased after the third treatment, and only a few worms were recovered after the fifth treatment, indicating that repeated treatment at short intervals was very effective. Complete eradication was not achieved, however, presumably because of reinfection. The female proportion among discharged worms tended to increase as the treatment was repeated.

    Topics: Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Ape Diseases; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Feces; Female; Male; Pan troglodytes; Pyrantel Pamoate; Sex Ratio

2005
Assessment of frequency, transmission, and genitourinary complications of enterobiasis (pinworms).
    International journal of dermatology, 2005, Volume: 44, Issue:10

    Pinworms are the most common helminth infection in the USA and Western Europe, with prevalence rates in some communities of as high as 30-50%. Pinworms generally live in the gastrointestinal tract, and helminth infestations have been noted in over one-quarter of acute appendectomies on histologic examination.. Although transmission is often attributed to the ingestion of infective eggs by nail biting and inadequate hand washing, inhalation and ingestion of airborne eggs also occur. The female Enterobius vermicularis migrates nightly to the perianal area to deposit her eggs, but some worms find their way into adjacent orifices, most commonly the female genitourinary tract, producing an array of symptoms. More consideration of this entity is justified in patients presenting with genitourinary complaints not responding to normal therapies. In the treatment of pinworms affecting genitourinary organs, treatment with possibly two oral agents, namely mebendazole and ivermectin, and a topical therapy for the eggs may be warranted.

    Topics: Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Denmark; England; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Female Urogenital Diseases; Humans; Incidence; India; Ivermectin; Male Urogenital Diseases; Mebendazole; Prevalence; Pyrantel Pamoate; Sweden; Thailand; United States

2005
Growth of Enterobius vermicularis in a chimpanzee after anthelmintic treatment.
    The Journal of parasitology, 2003, Volume: 89, Issue:3

    The growth of Enterobius vermicularis in a chimpanzee was investigated by observing worms discharged in feces after administration of pyrantel pamoate. Just after the final molting, immature adult male pinworms developed to a fully mature stage in 2 wk, after passing through a stage corresponding to the so-called Enterobius gregorii, which was surmised to be a younger adult form of E. vermicularis. The frequency distribution of body length forms 2 peaks in both male and female pinworms, with a depression in the transitional forms from the immature to the fully mature stage. This depression seems to be the result of more rapid growth or lower susceptibility to the drug in this transitional stage. Pyrantel pamoate effectively eradicated mature males, but gravid females were continuously observed in the feces after treatment. The complete eradication of pinworm infection by pyrantel pamoate could be achieved by repeated treatment at intervals shorter than 2 wk. This treatment would eradicate male worms first, resulting in females producing only unfertilized eggs, from which only males might hatch.

    Topics: Animals; Animals, Zoo; Antinematodal Agents; Ape Diseases; Enterobiasis; Enterobius; Feces; Female; Male; Pan troglodytes; Pyrantel Pamoate; Sex Characteristics; Sex Ratio

2003
Serum mineral levels in children with intestinal parasitic infection.
    Digestive diseases (Basel, Switzerland), 2003, Volume: 21, Issue:3

    Parasitic infections are highly prevalent in the general population. A relation between a parasitic infection and absorption of minerals is not an easy task. Serum levels of copper, zinc and magnesium were prospectively measured in 64 children with intestinal parasitic infection. Thirty-nine children with Enterobius vermicularis were treated with pyrantel pamoate and 25 children with Giardia lamblia with tinidazole and metronidazole. Three months after treatment, significant differences in serum copper, zinc and magnesium were seen in patients with E. vermicularis infection, and in serum magnesium levels in patients with G. lamblia. Although the pathogenic mechanism is not clear, these findings could reflect a deficiency related to malabsorption due to mucous affection. Early detection and treatment of intestinal parasitosis could avoid these serum mineral deficiencies.

    Topics: Adolescent; Antinematodal Agents; Antitrichomonal Agents; Child; Child, Preschool; Copper; Enterobiasis; Female; Giardiasis; Humans; Infant; Intestinal Absorption; Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic; Magnesium; Male; Metronidazole; Minerals; Nutritional Status; Prospective Studies; Pyrantel Pamoate; Tinidazole; Zinc

2003