Effect of two dosage levels of doramectin on health, growth performance and carcass characteristics of finishing beef steers

Authors

  • Karen C. Rogers Veterinary Research and Consulting Services, LLC, Greeley, CO 80634
  • William R. DuBois Veterinary Research and Consulting Services, LLC, Greeley, CO 80634
  • Thomas A. Portillo Veterinary Research and Consulting Services, LLC, Greeley, CO 80634
  • Delbert G. Miles Veterinary Research and Consulting Services, LLC, Greeley, CO 80634

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21423/bovine-vol38no2p171-177

Keywords:

animal health, anthelmintics, beef cattle, carcass quality, carcass yield, doramectin, dosage effects, growth rate, steers

Abstract

A total of 3446 crossbred Mexican-origin steers (average 625 lbs/284 kg) were utilized to determine the effect of administering doramectin at label-dose (full-dose, 200 mcg/kg body weight; 1 ml/110 lbs) vs. half-label dose (half-dose, 100 mcg/kg body weight; 1 ml/220 lbs) on health, growth performance and carcass characteristics of finishing beef steers. Health parameters, growth performance and carcass quality grade did not differ between treatments. However, there was a significant difference in the proportion of carcasses classified as USDA yield grades (YG) 2, 3 and 4. A higher proportion of carcasses in the full-dose treatment were scored YG 2 (P<0.0001), and a higher proportion of carcasses in the half-dose treatment were scored YG 3 (P=0.0014) and YG 4 (P=0.0112), suggesting steers treated with the full-dose treatment were leaner. These results indicate that there is no economic advantage to using the full dose (200 mcg/kg body weight) of doramectin in beef cattle.

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Published

2004-06-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Effect of two dosage levels of doramectin on health, growth performance and carcass characteristics of finishing beef steers. (2004). The Bovine Practitioner, 38(2), 171-177. https://doi.org/10.21423/bovine-vol38no2p171-177