Milk as a drink is in competition with various soft drinks, such as squashes and that type of production.
Dolinsky et al. (1981) used brain squashes to count larvae and histological sections to chart pathology in the presence of larvae.
Live embryonated and non-embryonated eggs were found in liver squashes and in gut mucosa.
Burren (1971) divided the brain into cerebral hemisperes, brain stem and cerebellum and counted larvae by means of brain squashes.
Muscle squashes were carried out on a small subsample of the flounders used for the epidemiological survey.
Summers et al. (1983) used brain squashes to count larval numbers and histology to detail pathology relative to brain location.
Both adult and juvenile worms, which were about one third the length of the adults, were found in liver squashes.
The liver squashes were only examined for parasitic organisms in a preliminary sub-sample, and randomly in the remaining flounder samples.