• 1 January 1984
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 48  (1) , 63-71
Abstract
Two techniques for culture of strongyle larvae were compared: the usual fecal culture and a new one where eggs were extracted from feces and larvae were grown in a more defined medium (agar plate fortified with Earle''s medium and yeast extract). The efficiency of on-agar cultures was better than that of the fecal cultures with a difference of 26% for Trichostrongylus colubriformis and 32% for Ostertagia circumcincta. The variability observed between the number of larvae collected from each culture was low (8% on average) compared with that of fecal cultures (15% on average) thus demonstrating a better reproducibility. On the other hand growth of the larvae was similar to that obtained in fecal medium. This new technique avoids the difficulty of controlling the conditions found in fecal cultures (particularly moisture) and could become a more accurate method for diagnosis than the conventional methods. A morphometric study of infective larvae derived from the 2 methods of culture was carried out. Despite the more defined conditions of development in the on-agar cultures, was not possible to obtain sufficiently homogeneous populations with regard to their measurements so as to distinguish larvae merely with the help of these criteria.