Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Doxycycline treatment effects on early heartworm infection in dogs
By McCall, J W et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2011·Department of Infectious Diseases, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effects of doxycycline on early infections of Dirofilaria immitis in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 20 beagles was tested for heartworm infections after being given injections of heartworm larvae. Some dogs received doxycycline, an antibiotic, for 30 days, while others did not receive any treatment. The results showed that the dogs treated with doxycycline had significantly fewer live heartworms and no microfilariae (the immature form of the heartworm) in their blood, indicating that the treatment was effective in reducing the heartworm population. The untreated dogs had many live heartworms and microfilariae. This suggests that doxycycline can help control early heartworm infections in dogs.
People also search for: dog heartworm treatment · doxycycline for heartworms in dogs · beagle heartworm prevention
Abstract
The antifilarial effects of tetracycline drugs were first demonstrated when they were found to be highly effective against L(3) and L(4) of Brugia pahangi and Litomosoides sigmodontis in rodent models. Tetracyclines are also now known to have activity against microfilariae and adult Dirofilaria immitis, but assessment of their activity against larval and juvenile heartworms has not been reported previously. This study assessed the effects of doxycycline administered orally at 10mg/kg twice daily for 30-day periods at selected times during the early part of the life cycle of D. immitis in dogs with dual infections of D. immitis and B. pahangi. Twenty beagles were randomly allocated by weight to four groups of five dogs each. On Day 0, each dog was given 50 D. immitis L(3) and 200 B. pahangi L(3) by SC injection. Dogs received doxycycline on Days 0-29 (Group 1); Days 40-69 (Group 2); or Days 65-94 (Group 3). Group 4 served as untreated controls. Blood samples were collected for microfilariae counting and antigen testing. Necropsy for collection of adult heartworms and selected tissues were performed Days 218-222. Heartworms recovered were examined by immunohistology, conventional microscopy/transmission electron microscopy, and molecular biology techniques. No live heartworms were recovered from dogs in Group 1; dogs in Group 2 had 0 to 2 live worms (98.4% efficacy), and dogs in Group 3 had 0-36 live worms (69.6% efficacy). All control dogs had live adult heartworms (25-41). The live worms recovered from dogs in Groups 2 and 3 were less developed and smaller that worms from control dogs. Microfilariae were not detected in any dogs in Groups 1 and 2; one dog in Group 3 had 1 microfilariae/ml at necropsy. All control dogs had microfilariae at necropsy. One dog in Group 1 was antigen positive at one sampling (Day 166). One dog in Group 2 was antigen positive Days 196 and 218-222 and three dogs in Group 3 were antigen positive at one or more samplings All five control dogs were antigen positive at all three sampling times. These findings suggest that doxycycline at 10mg/kg orally twice daily for 30 days has efficacy against migrating tissue-phase larvae and juvenile worms and will delay or restrict microfilarial production.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21345592/