Publications by authors named "P M Candy"

Whilst healthy adult farmed red deer show little clinical indication of parasite infection, they may still be maintaining infection levels on the farm through low-level shedding of nematode eggs and lungworm larvae. This work was undertaken to establish the long-term distribution of parasite counts, to determine whether the higher counts seen in previous trials are repeatable across the same animals. All adult female red deer on a New Zealand North Island property were faecal sampled (n = 209), weighed, and body condition scored (BCS) on five sampling occasions from March - August 2021.

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Haemonchus contortus can frequently be found infecting pre-weaned beef calves on sheep and beef farms around the North Island of New Zealand. The purpose of this study was to determine whether parasites cycling in young cattle constitute a potentially important source of infection for sheep. A field isolate of H.

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Background: Evidence should guide decisions in aphasia practice across the continuum of stroke care; however, evidence-practice gaps persist. This is particularly pertinent in the acute setting where 30% of people with stroke will have aphasia, and speech pathologists experience many challenges implementing evidence-based practice. This has important consequences for people with aphasia and their close others, as well as speech pathologists working in acute settings.

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In nematodes that invade the gastro-intestinal tract of the ruminant, the process of larval exsheathment marks the transition from the free-living to the parasitic stages of these parasites. To investigate the secretome associated with larval exsheathment, a closed in vitro system that effectively reproduces the two basic components of an anaerobic rumen environment (CO and 39 °C) was developed to trigger exsheathment in one of the most pathogenic and model gastrointestinal parasitic nematodes, (barber's pole worm). This study reports the use of multimodal untargeted metabolomics and lipidomics methodologies to identify the metabolic signatures and compounds secreted during in vitro larval exsheathment in the infective third-stage larva (iL3).

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Farmed red deer face challenges from nematode parasites, primarily the pulmonary species Dictyocaulus eckerti and the complex of Ostertagiinae nematodes in the abomasum. Previous investigations on New Zealand deer farms identified limited seasonality in faecal egg and larval output in all stock classes, however, this does not indicate the key times of year those eggs develop into infective-stage larvae, and subsequently contribute to infection risk. A simple temperature-driven model was developed for the free-living stages of a representative deer-specific Ostertagiinae species; Ostertagia leptospicularis.

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