# Feed Additives for Coccidiosis Prevention: Comparative Evaluation of the Efficacy of Diclazuril, Robenidine and Oregano Oil in Growing Rabbits Experimentally Infected With Eimeria spp

**Authors:** Florian Lohkamp, Julia Hankel, Andreas Beineke, Christina Strube, Josef Kamphues

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/jpn.70021 · 2025-10-27

## TL;DR

This study compared the effectiveness of three feed additives in preventing rabbit coccidiosis, finding none were effective against resistant Eimeria species.

## Contribution

The study is the first to confirm simultaneous resistance of rabbit Eimeria species to diclazuril and robenidine, and disprove oregano oil's efficacy.

## Key findings

- None of the additives reduced Eimeria reproduction or improved rabbit performance parameters.
- Diclazuril and robenidine showed complete ineffectiveness due to multiple resistance.
- Oregano oil was not scientifically justified as a phytogenic alternative.

## Abstract

The present study aimed to compare the efficacy of diclazuril and robenidine, used for decades to prevent rabbit coccidiosis, with oregano oil as a potential phytogenic alternative. Four compound feed variants were tested: one variant without additive for the control group (CG), a second supplemented with diclazuril (1 mg/kg; DG), a third with robenidine hydrochloride (66 mg/kg; RG) and a fourth added with oregano oil (75 mg/kg; OG). A total of 48 SPF rabbits aged 5 weeks were kept in groups of three animals. Four groups (12 rabbits) were assigned to each of the 4 dietary variants. At Day 10 after arrival, each animal was experimentally infected with 1300 sporulated oocysts (Eimeria media, Eimeria magna, Eimeria perforans, Eimeria flavescens and Eimeria coecicola) originating from German rabbit stocks. Absolute excreted oocyst numbers were determined, Eimeria species identified, and reproduction rates calculated. Feed and water intake, body weight gain and feed conversion were assessed in addition to excreted faecal weights and their dry matter content. In all groups, the experimental infection resulted in markedly reduced performance parameters, changed faecal consistencies and reduced faecal weights. None of the three feed additives significantly reduced Eimeria reproduction or improved zootechnical parameters and faecal quality compared to the control animals. The present study confirms for the first time the complete and simultaneous ineffectiveness of diclazuril and robenidine due to multiple resistance in rabbit Eimeria species. Oregano as a herbal alternative for the prevention of coccidiosis in rabbits is not scientifically justified.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** diclazuril (PubChem CID 456389), robenidine hydrochloride (PubChem CID 16212175)
- **Diseases:** coccidiosis (MONDO:0005707)
- **Species:** Eimeria media (taxon 471279), Eimeria magna (taxon 471282), Eimeria perforans (taxon 471283), Eimeria flavescens (taxon 471277), Eimeria coecicola (taxon 471281)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Coccidiosis (MESH:D003048), infection (MESH:D007239)
- **Chemicals:** Robenidine (MESH:D012370), Feed Additives (-), Diclazuril (MESH:C057884)
- **Species:** Eimeria magna (species) [taxon 471282], Oryctolagus cuniculus (domestic rabbit, species) [taxon 9986], Eimeria flavescens (species) [taxon 471277], Eimeria coecicola (species) [taxon 471281], Eimeria media (species) [taxon 471279], Eimeria perforans (species) [taxon 471283]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12824431/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12824431