Lots of people ask me about goat parasites and what to do about them. Well, here is what I have to say about that:
All goats can have internal and external parasites. Most goats become 
infected at birth by whatever parasites happen to be living on their dam
 or in her feces or in the soil. Internal and external parasites have a 
knack for being able to survive outside of the goat for a long period of
 time so they can simply be living in the soil and on the pasture 
waiting for a goat to come along. There's no way to avoid infection from
 parasites in goats. The only thing we can do is manage the infection so
 the parasites do not negatively impact the goat's health. 
When a goat is born, they don't have any internal parasites. Their first
 exposure to the outside world is when they pick up things like 
coccidia, tapeworms, barberpole worm and other internal nasties. These 
parasites have a lifespan of a couple of weeks from when they enter the 
baby goat as an egg or dormant cyst. In these weeks the parasite 
hatches, morphs into an adult while using nutrients from the goat to do 
so, and then starts to reproduce. The eggs that are produced by the 
adult parasite either stay in the goat and become adults or are shed 
from the goat through its feces. Another goat picks these eggs up from 
the soil, pen or pasture and the cycle starts all over again. 
Coccidia have a 3 week life cycle from cyst to adult. This is why you 
see kid goats get diarrhea around the 3-4 week old phase. The coccidia 
infected the goat at birth and at 3 weeks old, there's enough of them 
reproducing and living within the kid to cause intestinal damage, thus 
the diarrhea. It is very important to try to prevent coccidiosis by 
treating all kid goats who are 3 weeks old with a broad spectrum 
antibioitic that kills coccidia. There are several on the market, like 
Sulmet 12.5% drinking water solution, Corid powder, and Di-Methox 40% 
solution. These medicines kill adult forms of coccidia only so you must 
treat kids at 3 weeks old and then every 3 weeks after that until they 
are 15 weeks old. After 15 weeks they should be somewhat immune to 
coccidiosis. Adult goats rarely suffer from coccidiosis.
I currently prefer to use Corid. Corid kills adult coccidia by 
inhibiting their absorption of thiamine (vitamin B1). Some people feel 
this could cause thiamine loss in the goats too, so it is recommended to
 supplement any goat taking Corid with thiamine and other B vitamins. 
This can be done by giving the goats Fortified B Complex (it's 
"fortified" with extra thiamine) or thiamine/B vitamin gel. Since all of
 the coccidiosis medications are antibiotics, I also recommend giving 
any goats on them supplemental probiotics to replace any of the good gut
 bacteria that got killed by the medicine. I use Probios probiotic gel. I
 usually give the Corid to the kids in the morning, and then in the 
evening give them thiamine and Probios each day during treatment and for
 1 week after. The thiamine and Probios will not hurt the goats in any 
way, so it is better to give lots of this and be safe. 
Tapeworms are another internal parasite to worry about in kid goats. 
Goats over 6 months old tend to have less problems with tapeworms than 
kid goats for some reason. Kid goats who have lots of tapeworms will get
 a pot-bellied look and be smaller and slower growing than uninfected 
kids. It is recommended to preventatively treat kids for tapeworms and 
other stomach worms by giving them Valbazen dewormer at 1cc per 10 lbs 
weight, starting at 3 weeks old and repeated every 10 days for 30 days. 
Valbazen is okay to use in kid goats and non-pregnant adults but should 
NEVER be used in pregnant goats (or potentially pregnant ones) because 
it can cause birth defects and abortions. Repeat the Valbazen every 10 
days for 30 days because it is only effective against adult tapeworms. 
The first deworming will kill all of the current adults but leave eggs 
and cysts in the goats to hatch and reinfect. The second deworming takes
 care of all the internal eggs that hatched after the first. The third 
deworming takes care of all of the eggs and cysts that were picked up by
 the goat from the environment and hatched into adults. The 30 day cycle
 is very important to use every time you deworm, regardless of dewormer 
chosen. This is the most effective way to deworm. 
So now you have your kids on preventative coccidiosis medication and preventative dewormer. What about the adults? 
The best way to manage parasites in adult goats is to monitor their 
condition frequently and only treat for worms when warranted. I never 
recommend to use a strict deworming schedule on your entire herd. Always
 deworm only the goats that have the worms! I have my own 4 step 
monitoring system for parasites.
1. Body condition - I want my goats to look sleek and shiny with just 
the right amount of weight. I don't want my goats to be too fat nor too 
thin. Parasites rob nutrients from the goats and cause them to be 
thinner than they should be. If I see one of my goats eating well but 
not gaining weight, I check for parasites. 
Another external clue to parasites is the condition of the goat's hair. 
Their fur should be sleek and shiny. If it is dull and looks like it has
 split ends, the goat has worms. If the hair is shedding constantly and 
looks dry, the goat has worms. If when I brush the hair back and there 
are little bugs moving around, the goat has lice. Mites cause hair to 
fall out in patches. If the goat's tail is rubbed raw and missing lots 
of hair from scratching, the goat has pinworms that live around the 
anus. A goat's coat can tell you a lot about what is going on 
internally.
2. Mineral supplementation - This is very important to parasite 
management in goats. Goats need lots of minerals to stay healthy and any
 goats that are deficient in minerals are very susceptible to parasite 
problems. I supplement my goats with a loose mineral blend made 
specifically for goats called Sweetlix Meatmaker 16:8. It is a great 
all-around mineral that works for all types of goats (not just meat 
goats). I also supplement my goats with a copper bolus every 4 months. 
Copper is very important for goats and plays a huge roll in parasite 
control. Most goats are deficient in copper so they need extra copper 
even when getting it in their loose minerals. I use Copasure cow copper 
boluses that have been re-sized for goats. I give 1 gram of copper per 
22 lbs of goat. The boluses are little gel caps filled with copper rods.
 It is important that the goats swallow the boluses without chewing them
 and on an empty stomach. It is also important to either wad the bolus 
in wax or shortening or follow bolusing immediately with Vitamin A, D, E
 gel. The wax, shortening, or gel helps to encapsulate the bolus within 
the goat's rumen and keep the rods in there for slow absorption. If the 
goat chews the bolus or eats it on a full stomach or takes it without 
wax, the copper rods can be flushed from the rumen and not absorbed.
3. FAMACHA - A cheap and dirty way to assess parasite load in goats is 
to look at the color of their lower eyelid membrane. This helps to tell 
you if the goat is anemic. Anemia is most often caused by barberpole 
worm (a very common internal parasite) that is sucking the blood from 
your goat. Where there is barberpole worm, there are usually other 
internal parasites so it is good to deworm a goat when they are anemic. 
The lower eyelid membrane should be dark pink or red in healthy goats. 
If is it white or light pink, the goat is anemic and needs deworming. 
Unfortunately FAMACHA does not tell you the type of parasites found but 
it does give you a good measurement of potential worm infestation. It is
 best to do FAMACHA on all your goats at least once a month, if not once
 a week.
4. Fecal samples - Once you have determined through lack of body 
condition, lack of mineral supplementation, and FAMACHA that your goat 
has internal parasites, it is important to find out what type of 
parasite it is and how large of an infestation. Fecal samples can tell 
you that. They are easy to do and can by done at home by anyone with a 
decent microscope. Just take a sample of poop from each goat (3-4 
berries), process it per fecal sample instructions (found on the Fiasco 
Farm website), and look at the prepared fecal slide under the 
microscope. You should see little bits of fecal debris floating around 
on the slide. You should also be able to clearly see parasite eggs and 
cysts. Count up the different types seen and the amounts per type. 
Coccidia oocysts are tiny. Barberpole worm and other stomach worm eggs 
are larger. Liver fluke eggs have a flat spot on one end. Tapeworm cysts
 are square. There's lots of pictures on the internet of what parasite 
eggs in goats look like on a fecal sample. 
Once you have figured out what types of worms are in your goats, then 
you can choose the appropriate treatment. Coccidiosis requires a 
sulfa-based, broad spectrum antibiotic (NOT A DEWORMER). Tapeworms are 
killed by Valbazen or Fenbendazole. Barberpole worm and stomach worms 
are killed by most dewormers, especially Ivermectin and Cydectin. Liver 
flukes require Ivomec Plus injectable (the "Plus" is actually what kills
 them so regular Ivomec won't work). 
Like I said earlier, always use a 30 day deworming cycle when you 
deworm. Treat the goats every 10 days for 30 days in order to kill all 
the adult worms that have hatched. It is not at all effective to deworm 
once and then not again for 6 months! This does absolutely nothing to 
help reduce the worm population because the worm eggs that are in the 
goats and the worm eggs in the environment are still alive to reproduce.
 You need to treat twice more to kill these. 
It is best to give any dewormer on an empty stomach and not give any 
grain or hay for at least 30 minutes after dosing to allow absorption of
 the dewormer. Giving dewormers during feeding time is not effective 
because the dewormers will get flushed out if the system by digestion of
 hay/pasture and grain. I deworm my goats in the morning before putting 
them out to pasture or feeding. Then I wait at least 30 minutes and put 
them out to pasture or give them hay. I do not give them grain after 
deworming for at least 12 hours because grain is quickly drawn into the 
digestive tract from the rumen and I don't want the dewormer to be taken
 out of the rumen faster than necessary. I want it to stay in there and 
be absorbed or at least be slowly drawn into the rest of the digestive 
tract. 
Most people recommend using one brand and type of dewormer exclusively 
until it is no longer effective. This helps to cut down on possible worm
 resistance to dewormers. Worm resistance is a common problem because no
 dewormer is effective against 100% of the worm population in all goats.
 There's always going to be a small percentage of worms that are 
naturally resistant to a particular dewormer. For example (I am making 
these percentages up just for this example, so don't quote me!!), if you
 use Ivermectin 1.87% horse paste for deworming, it will kill 98% of the
 worm population in your goats. The 2% that is left will be the ones 
that will reproduce the next generation of worms. Now the next time you 
use Ivermectin, only 70% of the worms will be killed. 30% will be 
resistant due to genetics and will reproduce the next generation. The 
next time you deworm with Ivermectin, 40% of the worms will be killed 
and 60% will be resistant. And so on, and so on until a large majority 
of the worms are resistant to Ivermectin 1.87% horse paste. This will be
 when you notice that after you deworm, your goats still have rough 
coats, anemia and worms on their fecal samples. Time to switch 
dewormers. Your worms may be resistant to Ivermectin 1.87% horse paste 
but they won't be resistant to Valbazen because it is a totally 
different class of chemical. So you start the resistance cycle all over 
again by switching to a new dewormer and continuing with that one until 
resistance occurs. 
Don't rotate dewormers every time you deworm because you could 
potentially create a "super worm" that is resistant to all dewormers. 
For example: You deworm with Ivermectin 1.87% horse paste and it kills 
98% of the worm population in your goats. The 2% that is left will be 
resistant to Ivermectin and will reproduce. Then the next time you 
rotate to Valbazen and it also kill 98% of the worms. BUT there is a 
good possibility that the 2% of the worms left this time can be 
resistant to both Ivermectin and Valbazen, after having lived through 
the first deworming with Ivermectin and the second with Valbazen. Then 
you deworm again with Cydectin and kill 98% of those worms. Now there is
 a possibility that the 2% of worms left are resistant to Ivermectin, 
Valbazen, and Cydectin! Eventually if you rotate through all the classes
 of dewormers available often enough, you could create a super worm that
 is resistant to EVERYTHING!! Only rotate dewormers when the one you are
 using is no longer effective or your goats have a type of worm that 
isn't killed by the dewormer you normally use (ie: you use Valbazen but 
the goats have liver flukes you may have to switch to Ivomec Plus for 
the liver flukes). 
Herbal dewormers work well as a preventative for both internal and 
external parasites. They do not treat any outbreaks of parasites but 
they make the goats' bodies an unwelcome environment where parasites 
prefer not to live. I use Hoegger's Herbal Dewormer in my goats and have
 had great results. I still have to use chemical dewormers occasionally 
but the necessity of these has been lower since starting the herbal. 
Also my goats seem to have less lice, mites, nasal bots, lungworms, and 
pinworms than before starting the herbs. The most important part of a 
herbal deworming regimen is to be consistent in giving each goat a 
proper dose of the herbs every week, continuously for life. The herbs do
 not work unless you are giving them consistently because they do not 
stay in the goats' systems for more than a week. I prefer to mix the dry
 herbal dewormer with molasses to create a ball. The goats love these 
little "treats" and will eat them out of my hand which makes a very 
convenient way to ensure they are getting their individual doses of 
herbs each week.
 
4 comments:
Rose, thank you for your well researched and clearly written post about goat parasites. You have done a great job including the many factors that contribute to goat parasite infections and all that is needed to enhance goat health so they are more likely to stay healthy. Goats are so wonderful. More people should raise them!
Hello! I have a question about treatment with liquid corid. Concerning the every 3 weeks for 15 weeks. How many days in a row do you dose? One dose per day for how many days? And give this treatment every 3 weeks?
I have a friend who has been terribly ill .........he doc says she has CRYPTOSPORIDIUM quite possibly from my five week old kid goat that has never been around other goats , I have had him snice he was about six hours old. , He was five weeks old at the time she was petting him. He is still a house pet for me. I told her I would try to find all the info I could when I saw her today and than I just came across this article.
He children were playing and touching the goats as well as her infant.......... she asked me if it were possible that the baby after petting the kid quite possibly put his fingers in his moms mouth as children often do. Can you shed any light on this........if so everyone would be ever so grateful.
can I give cydectin and valbazen on same day on a 3week old kid because valbazene gets the tape worms
Post a Comment