animals and humans. The mode of transmission is the fecal to oralroute, and the major symptoms are weakness, loss of weight, ane-mia, fever, hepatomegaly and death in severe infection, especiallyin young animals [2]. The pathogenesis of fasciolosis involves pre-hepatic and hepatic stages; the former caused by newly excystjuveniles (NEJs) penetrating through the intestinal wall and per-itoneal cavity leading to hemorrhage and inflammation [3,4]. Thepathology is more severe in heavy infection. Hepatic stage startswhen juvenile flukes arrive at the liver and cause parenchyma dam-age by the parasite migration [5]. The adult stage is attained oncethe immature flukes reach the bile duct, where the parasites attachor migrate in the ducts leading to tissue damage, atrophy, necrosis,fatty changes and calcification in chronic fasciolosis [6,7].The control strategies are designed to interrupt the parasitelife’s cycle by using anthelmintics, grazing management and