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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog intestinal worm infections treated with spinosad and milbemycin

By Schnitzler, Beate et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2012·Elanco Animal Health, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Confirmation of the efficacy of a combination tablet of spinosad and milbemycin oxime against naturally acquired infections of canine intestinal nematode parasites.

Species:
dog
Canine giardiasisStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with intestinal worm infections, including whipworms and hookworms, were treated with a flavored combination tablet containing spinosad and milbemycin oxime. This treatment was given orally, and it proved to be very effective, clearing up to 100% of the adult worms in the dogs within a week. The dogs experienced only minor side effects, which were mostly related to their existing infections rather than the treatment itself. Overall, the combination tablet was found to be safe and highly effective for treating these common intestinal parasites in dogs.

People also search for: dog intestinal worms treatment · spinosad milbemycin for dogs · how to treat hookworms in dogs

Abstract

Four separate controlled and blinded studies were conducted to confirm the dose of spinosad and milbemycin oxime (MO) administered orally in combination to dogs for the treatment and control of naturally acquired infections of adult whipworm (Trichuris vulpis), hookworm (Ancylostoma caninum) and ascarids (Toxocara canis, Toxascaris leonina). Dogs were allocated randomly based on pre-treatment quantitative nematode egg counts of each species of interest to one of two treatment groups of 10 or 11 animals each. In each study, spinosad and MO in combination, was given orally to dogs using the lower half (30-45 mg/kg spinosad; 0.5-0.75 mg/kg MO) of the US commercial dose band (30-60 mg/kg spinosad; 0.5-1.0mg/kg MO) of each active ingredient on Day 0 using a tablet formulation. A corresponding vehicle control group was treated similarly in each individual study. Dogs were necropsied post-treatment on Day 7/8. All nematodes in the intestinal tract collected at necropsy were identified and counted by species and stage. The spinosad and MO combination group demonstrated significantly different adult intestinal nematode efficacy in each individual study as compared to the vehicle control group. Efficacy values for whipworm, hookworm, T. canis and T. leonina were 100%, 99.8%, 100%, 93.3%, respectively. Minor non-serious adverse events were observed in a small number of control and treated dogs that were attributed primarily to the natural nematode infections. In summary, flavored spinosad and MO combination tablets administered orally to dogs were both safe and highly efficacious delivering >93% up to 100% adult intestinal nematode control in naturally infected dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22115944/