Journal of Parasitic Diseases, ( ISI ), Volume (47), No (4), Year (2023-12) , Pages (820-828)

Title : ( Anticoccidial effects of tannin-based herbal formulation (Artemisia annua, Quercus infectoria, and Allium sativum) against coccidiosis in broilers )

Authors: Seyed Ali Ghafouri , Abolfazl Ghaniei , Soheil Sadr , Amir ali amiri , amirebrahim tavanayi , ali charbgoo , Shakila Ghiassi , Behnoush dianat ,

Access to full-text not allowed by authors

Citation: BibTeX | EndNote

Abstract

Background Avian coccidiosis is considered among the infectious disease of high cost in the poultry industry. Herbal extracts are safe and reliable substitute anticoccidial drugs for chemical feed additives as they do not sequel to drug resistance and tissue remnants. Objective The current study aimed to assess the anticoccidial effect of an herbal complex of 3 plants (Artemisia annua, Quercus infectoria, and Allium sativum) in broiler chickens compared to toltrazuril anticoccidial. Methods This experiment used one hundred twenty broiler chickens and divided them into four equally numbered groups. All the groups, except group (D), were experimentally infected with mixed Eimeria spp. (E. tenella, E. maxima, E. necatrix and E. brunetti) on day 14. Group (A) was treated with a herbal mixture, containing 75% Quercus infectoria with a minimum of 30% total tannin, 16% Artemisia annua with a minimum of 0.02% artemisinin, and 9% Allium sativum with a minimum of 0.4% total phenol contents. Group (B) was treated with toltrazuril. Group (C) did not have any treatment. Group (D) was healthy all the experiment period as a negative control group. During a 42-day breeding period, the study examined clinical signs, weight gains, feed conversion ratio, lesions scoring, casualties, and the number of oocysts in different bird groups. Results Group (D) showed the most significant weight gain, indicating the economic damage caused by coccidiosis. The best feed conversion ratio was observed in the unchallenged group, and coccidiosis negatively affected it in other groups. Clinical signs of dysentery, diarrhea, and lethargy were seen post-challenge but improved with treatment. Group (D) showed no losses; others had casualties and coccidiosis lesions. Lesion scores were lowest in the group (D), and the herbal mixture improved performance. The herbal mixture and toltrazuril reduced oocyst counts in feces earlier than the untreated group. Conclusion In conclusion, the anticoccidial activity of the mentioned herbal complex recommends its use as an alternative anticoccidial agent to chemotherapeutic drugs for controlling coccidiosis.

Keywords

Chicken · Coccidiosis · Treatment · Eimeria · Herbs
برای دانلود از شناسه و رمز عبور پرتال پویا استفاده کنید.

@article{paperid:1095744,
author = {Ghafouri, Seyed Ali and Ghaniei, Abolfazl and Sadr, Soheil and Amir Ali Amiri and Tavanayi, Amirebrahim and Charbgoo, Ali and Ghiassi, Shakila and Behnoush Dianat},
title = {Anticoccidial effects of tannin-based herbal formulation (Artemisia annua, Quercus infectoria, and Allium sativum) against coccidiosis in broilers},
journal = {Journal of Parasitic Diseases},
year = {2023},
volume = {47},
number = {4},
month = {December},
issn = {0971-7196},
pages = {820--828},
numpages = {8},
keywords = {Chicken · Coccidiosis · Treatment · Eimeria · Herbs},
}

[Download]

%0 Journal Article
%T Anticoccidial effects of tannin-based herbal formulation (Artemisia annua, Quercus infectoria, and Allium sativum) against coccidiosis in broilers
%A Ghafouri, Seyed Ali
%A Ghaniei, Abolfazl
%A Sadr, Soheil
%A Amir Ali Amiri
%A Tavanayi, Amirebrahim
%A Charbgoo, Ali
%A Ghiassi, Shakila
%A Behnoush Dianat
%J Journal of Parasitic Diseases
%@ 0971-7196
%D 2023

[Download]