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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Topical fipronil-permethrin stops cat flea eggs and adults on dogs

By Beugnet, Frédéric et al.·Published in Parasite (Paris, France)·2016·Merial S.A.S., France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Assessment of the efficacy of a topical combination of fipronil-permethrin (Frontline Tri-Act/Frontect) against egg laying and adult emergence of the cat flea (Ctenocephalides felis) in dogs.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 16 healthy dogs was tested to see how well a topical flea treatment called Frontline Tri-Act (which contains fipronil and permethrin) worked against cat fleas. After applying the treatment, the dogs showed a 95.3% reduction in adult fleas within 36 hours, and the treatment remained effective for up to 8 weeks. The treatment also significantly decreased flea egg laying by 84.5% shortly after the first application. This means that not only did the dogs have fewer fleas, but the treatment also helped prevent new fleas from hatching.

People also search for: dog flea treatment effectiveness · Frontline Tri-Act for dogs · how to get rid of fleas on dogs

Abstract

This study was conducted to assess the prevention of egg laying and the inhibition of the emergence of the cat flea (Ctenocephalides felis) resulting from the application of a combination of fipronil and permethrin (Frontline Tri-Act/Frontect, Merial) on dogs. Sixteen healthy dogs were included after pre-treatment live flea counts and randomly allocated to two groups. Eight dogs served as untreated controls and 8 dogs were treated on Day 0 and Day 30 with topical application of fipronil/permethrin at the minimum dose of 6.76 mg/kg fipronil and 50.48 mg/kg permethrin. On days -2, 7, 21, 28, 42 and 56, each dog was infested with 100 fleas. Flea eggs were collected from each dog in individual trays from 12 to 36 h after treatment or each flea re-infestation. All fleas were removed by combing and counted 36 h after treatment or infestations. The collected eggs were counted and incubated for 28 days for larval development and adult emergence assessment. The curative efficacy of Frontline Tri-Act/Frontectagainst adult fleas 36 h after treatment was 95.3% and the efficacy remained 100% after subsequent flea infestations for 8 weeks. Compared to the control group, the treatment reduced egg laying by 84.5% within 36 h after first treatment and was 99.9%, 100%, 100%, 100%, 100% on collection days 7, 21, 29, 43 and 57, respectively. Frontline Tri-Act/Frontectreduced by 28.7% the emergence of new adult fleas from eggs laid during the 48 h of pre-treatment infestation. The inhibition of adult emergence from incubated flea eggs could not be assessed after flea re-infestation in the treated group as no eggs were collected.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27991415/