The clinico-pathological effects of Schistosoma bovis were monitored in zebu calves for a year after exposure to 100 or 200 cercariae/kg body weight and were related to the number and reproductive activities of the parasites present. The disease was characterised by diarrhoea, weight loss or poor weight gain, anaemia, serum protein changes and eosinophilia. These changes were broadly related to the level of infection and were most prominent during the two months following patency when faecal egg counts were highest. Subsequently, the condition of most animals improved. This was associated with a marked reduction in faecal egg excretion which in turn was related to worm deaths, reduced worm fecundity and egg retention in the tissues.
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