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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Effectiveness and side effects of heartworm treatment in dogs

By Romito, G et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2024·Department of Veterinary Medical Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Efficacy and tolerability of the American Heartworm Society therapeutic protocol in dogs affected by heartworm disease without caval syndrome.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 35 dogs, aged 1 to 13 years, diagnosed with heartworm disease were treated using the American Heartworm Society's recommended protocol. After treatment, all dogs survived and 32 out of 35 tested negative for heartworms during follow-up. Some dogs experienced mild side effects like lethargy, cough, and minor pain, but these were short-lived and didn't require extra treatment. Overall, the protocol proved to be both effective and safe for dogs with heartworm disease.

People also search for: dog heartworm treatment · heartworm disease symptoms in dogs · side effects of heartworm treatment in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The American Heartworm Society medical protocol represents the current standard of therapy for canine heartworm disease without caval syndrome. However, data on the tolerability of this protocol are limited. This study aimed to describe efficacy and prevalence of possible treatment-related side effects in dogs with heartworm disease treated using the American Heartworm Society protocol. MATERIALS AND METHODS: For this retrospective multi-centre cohort study, dogs diagnosed with classes 1 to 3 heartworm disease that completed the American Heartworm Society medical protocol were searched in four medical databases. Demographic, clinical, diagnostic, therapeutic and outcome data, including the number and type of possible treatment-related side effects, were retrieved. RESULTS: Thirty-five dogs were included. The median age and bodyweight were 6 years (1 to 13 years) and 17.3 kg (4.9 to 50 kg), respectively. Heartworm disease was classified as classes 1, 2 and 3 in 20 of 35, 11 of 35 and four of 35 dogs, respectively. In addition to the therapeutic recommendations of the American Heartworm Society, eight of 35 dogs underwent sedation to favour melarsomine administration, and 30 of 35 received ice at the injection site. After adulticide therapy, all dogs were hospitalised with cage rest [median time 12 hours (6 to 48 hours)]. All dogs survived the treatment. All dogs with long-term follow-up (32/35) became negative. Furthermore, treatment-related side effects were rare, mild and rapidly recovered without the need for supporting therapies; these included depression/lethargy (4/35 dogs), cough (2/35 dogs) and lameness, pain and gastrointestinal signs (1/35 dog each). CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The American Heartworm Society medical protocol is efficient and safe in dogs with classes 1 to 3 heartworm disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37888802/