Sierra Sun Times
Heartworms
- By Linda Gast
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Heartworms, heartworm disease and heartworm treatment in dogs
This article comes from the Placerville Vet:
www.placervillevet.com
This article is certainly applicable to our area here in the Sierra. The picture of a dogs heart
with the worms coming out says it all. We get many dogs at the Mariposa SPCA that test positive for heartworm.
The treatment is very expensive and is a lot for a small organization to handle. Jeanette Lozano,
Shelter Manager usually puts a jar on the counter asking for donations for a particular dog. Right now we have two dogs
with Heartworm.
If you would like to help just drop by the office or send a check to the shelter.
As you read the article you will see that dogs get Heartworm from each other via mosquito bites.
If everyone would get their dog tested and then put them on a once a month preventive medication it would go a long ways
toward cutting down on the number of dogs that are infected. Do not put your dog on the once a month medication until
he is tested to make sure he does not have the disease.
The dog photos are of some of the dogs that have come through the shelter and have been treated
and adopted to new homes.
Heartworm transmission
Baby heartworms do not grow up in the dog where they were born. If they did, the dog would quickly die and so would the heartworms. Next, a mosquito comes along and bites the infected dog, sucking up baby heartworms. It probably isn't too good for the mosquito, but this is what the worms have been waiting for. During the next month, inside the mosquito, the heartworm babies grow into heartworm teenagers, a stage partway between baby and adult. Now, the mosquito bites another dog, infecting it with teenage heartworms, now ready to develop into adults. After six or seven more months, the life cycle is complete. The new adult male and female heartworms are busily producing thousands of babies. Heartworms in the Northern Sierra foothillsThe tree hole mosquito, which breeds in oak trees at our elevation, is very good at spreading heartworms. It lives longer than most mosquitoes, takes repeated blood meals, and even seems to remember where it found food the last time. Since it is likely to deliver teenage heartworms to the to the same dog they originally came from or to nearby dogs, we tend to see clusters of very severe heartworm infestation. If you look out your window and see oak trees, you are in prime heartworm territory. In 1972, when the heartworm problem in this part of the United States was first being recognized, 25% of all heartworm infections which were reported in the state of California that year were reported by our hospital. Entomologists from U. C. Berkley came to Placerville to catch mosquitoes for their studies. We have a lot of heartworms here. Unprotected outdoor dogs will probably catch heartworms. Indoor dogs going outside in the morning and evening will probably catch heartworms. If you think your dog's long hair will keep this from happening, forget it. Mosquitos bite dogs in the face. Statistics show that long hair offers no protection whatever. Canine heartworm diseasesymptomsThere are no symptoms at all until the disease is very advanced. Then, the symptoms are those of congestive heart failure: dull coat, lack of energy, coughing, difficulty breathing, perhaps fainting spells and an enlarged abdomen. Waiting for symptoms to develop and then treating is not a realistic alternative to prevention. preventionThere are two different oral drugs used for once-a-month heartworm prevention, plus a new one that is applied to the skin and also kills fleas. In really cold climates, prevention medication is not necessary in the wintertime. In Placerville, we have mosquitoes year 'round, and although we could theoretically skip the medication when it is cold enough, the weather is different every year. Our recommendation is once a month, year 'round, permanently heartworm testingNo medication is perfect and none of us have perfect memories. Dogs should be periodically retested. Although the official recommendation is once a year, we believe that when pet owners feel confident that the medication is being given regularly, testing every two years is probably adequate. heartworm treatmentAlthough heartworms can be fatal and treatment for the disease involves risk, the condition is usually curable. Treatment requires careful medical care and complete rest at home afterwards. The first thing we will do is evaluate your dog's health, performing a physical examination, laboratory tests and chest x-rays to evaluate the condition of the heart and lungs. We might find other problems that need attention first, or if the heartworm infestation is very severe, we might want to adjust our treatment plan. Adult heartworms are about six inches long and live mostly inside the heart. Baby heartworms are microscopic and live within blood vessels throughout the body. Each stage must be treated separately. First we eliminate the adult worms by giving a series of injections spaced out over a two day period. When treatment is finished your dog's heartworms will be dead or dying. That's good, but the heart is still full of worms. The worms gradually break into smaller and smaller pieces until the fragments are tiny enough for the body to eliminate them. The critical period is when worm fragments are small enough to disperse into the body but still large enough to plug small arteries in the lungs. Vigorous activity makes the heart pump faster, pushing bits of dead heartworm out into small blood vessels where they can cause trouble, so vigorous activity must be avoided. home careYour dog needs rest (indoors or on a leash) for five weeks. Dogs that are kept outdoors must have an enclosed kennel or other arrangement which prevents vigorous exercise. If you see signs of illness such as poor appetite, depression or vomiting, there may be a problem. Check your dog's temperature using an ordinary human thermometer. Lubricate the thermometer with Vaseline or KY Jelly, insert halfway and read after two minutes. The morning temperature should be below 102.4. Dogs with a morning temperature higher than this should be examined. Early treatment will control most complications. After five weeks, the adult heartworms are gone but there are still thousands of baby heartworms in the bloodstream. We will schedule your dog to spend a day with us about five weeks after the initial treatment. First we give a drug to reduce possible reactions. Then, about half an hour later, the first dose of prevention medication. Drop your dog off between 8:00 and 10:00 in the morning and come back about 5:00 or 5:30. Give the next dose of prevention medication one month later, at home. After the first dose, there is no further concern about drug reactions. Because the heart and lungs are not yet completely back to normal, it is a good idea to avoid heavy exercise like hunting or ball chasing for an additional eight weeks. follow up testingSometimes a few heartworms survive treatment. To detect these worms, we do a final test six months later. If any heartworms are still alive, the injections must be repeated, which costs approximately half as much as the original treatment. summary
treatment costAlthough other drugs have been used in the past, practically all veterinarians use an
arsenic-containing drug called Immiticide - safer than what we used in the past but more expensive. It is given by
injection deep into the muscles of the lower back. Unfortunately, Immiticide is extremely irritating. Painful even when
injected properly, the least bit of Immiticide injected in the wrong place causes great pain, sometimes for days. To
prevent this, we administer xylazine, a potent pain killer and sedative, before injecting Immiticide. This eliminates
injection pain, and because our patients are now sleepy and comfortable, there is no struggle and practically no chance of
accidentally getting any Immiticide where it might cause trouble afterwards. |

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