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Heartworms
Canine Heart Infested with Heartworms
Adult heartworms, about six inches long, live in the heart and large
blood vessels. The adult male and female worms produce thousands
of microscopic baby worms. These baby heartworms do not grow up in the
dog where they were born. (If they did, the dog would immediately die
and that would be the end of the heartworms.) Before baby worms can
develop further, they must be inside a mosquito.
Next, a mosquito comes along and bites the infected dog,
sucking up baby heartworms. This probably isn't too good for the
mosquito, but it is what the worms have been waiting for. During the
next month, the heartworm babies grow into heartworm teenagers, a stage
partway between baby and adult.
Now, the mosquito bites another dog, infecting the new dog
with teenage heartworms, ready to develop into adults. After six
or seven more months, the life cycle is complete: new adult male and
female heartworms are busily producing thousands of baby heartworms.
Symptoms
There 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.
Prevention
There are three different drugs used for once-a-month
heartworm prevention, plus a new one that is applied to the skin and also
kills fleas. We currently recommend a good-tasting monthly product called
Interceptor because it is entirely internal and also controls the most
important intestinal worms. In 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
sufficiently frigid, the weather is different every year. Our
recommendation is once a month, year 'round, permanently
Heartworm Testing
No medication is perfect and none of us have perfect memories.
Dogs should be periodically retested. Although the official
recommendation is once a year, we think this is excessive. In
situations where pet owners feel confident that the medication is being given
regularly, testing every two years is adequate.
Heartworm Treatment
Although heartworms can be fatal and treatment for the disease involves
risk, the condition is nearly always curable. Treatment requires careful
medical care and complete rest at home afterwards.
The first thing we will do is evaluate your dog's condition, performing a
physical examination, laboratory tests and chest x-rays to evaluate the
condition of the heart and lungs. We might find other health problems that
need attention first, or if the heartworm infestation is very severe, we might
want to use a different treatment schedule.
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 we finish treatment, 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 Care
You can help reduce the risk of complications by giving your dog aspirin.
Start two weeks before the in-hospital treatment and keep giving it for a
month afterwards. Dogs 20 to 45 lbs. get 1 baby aspirin once a day, dogs 50 to
90 lbs. get 2 baby aspirin once a day. One 325 mgm regular aspirin equals four
baby aspirin. Give at meal time. It doesn't really matter whether you use
buffered aspirin or plain, but use aspirin, not Tylenol.
Your 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 any sign of illness such as poor appetite,
depression or vomiting, there may be a problem. Check your dog's temperature
using an ordinary human rectal 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 heartworm treatment
complications.
After five weeks, the adult heartworms are gone but there are still
thousands of baby heartworms in the bloodstream. The best way of eliminating
these microscopic worms is by using Interceptor, the same drug used for
heartworm prevention.
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 Interceptor. A few
dogs may still have a mild reaction, so we will want to watch your dog for the
day. Drop him off between 8:00 and 10:00 in the morning and come back about
5:00 or 5:30. Give the next dose of Interceptor one month later, at home.
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 Testing
Sometimes a few heartworms survive treatment. To detect these worms, we do
a final test six months later. If any heartworms are still alive, the
Immiticide injections must be repeated, which costs approximately half as much
as the original treatment.
Summary
- Hospital treatment for adult worms (about 3 days)
- Rest at home for 5 weeks
- Hospital treatment for baby worms (1 day)
- No vigorous exercise for 8 more weeks
- Give HW Preventative once a month, permanently
- After 6 months, test for surviving adult worms
Thanks to the Placerville Veterinary Clinic for this
insightful text. Web
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