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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Low-dose praziquantel and fenbendazole treat dog schistosomiasis

By Cridge, Harry et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2021·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Efficacy of a low-dose praziquantel and fenbendazole protocol in the treatment of asymptomatic schistosomiasis in dogs.

Species:
dog
Canine leptospirosisStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

Twelve dogs with asymptomatic schistosomiasis (a type of parasitic infection) were treated with a low-dose combination of praziquantel and fenbendazole. After treatment, most dogs showed improvement, with all being negative for the infection by fecal saline sedimentation tests by day 60. However, some dogs still tested positive with a different test called fecal PCR, indicating that monitoring is important. A few dogs experienced mild side effects, but overall, the treatment was effective for managing this condition.

People also search for: dog schistosomiasis treatment · praziquantel fenbendazole for dogs · asymptomatic dog parasite treatment

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Established treatment protocols for schistosomiasis (Heterobilharzia americana) in dogs are expensive. Anecdotal reports suggest that lower doses of praziquantel, combined with fenbendazole, may eliminate asymptomatic infections. OBJECTIVES: Evaluate the efficacy of a low-dose praziquantel and fenbendazole protocol to manage asymptomatic schistosomiasis in dogs and compare fecal saline sedimentation (FSS) and fecal PCR (FPCR) for therapeutic monitoring. ANIMALS: Twelve asymptomatic dogs with positive FPCR and FSS results for schistosomiasis. METHODS: Prospective observational study. On day 0, dogs received praziquantel at a median dose of 5 mg/kg PO q8h for 2 days, with fenbendazole at 24 mg/kg PO q24h for 7 days. Fecal PCR and FSS were repeated in all dogs on days 30, 60, and 90. RESULTS: By day 30, 10 of 12 dogs were negative by FSS, but only 3 of 12 were negative by FPCR. By day 60, all 12 dogs were negative by FSS, and 8 of 12 had become negative by FPCR. By day 90, all 12 dogs remained negative by FSS, but 5 of 12 were positive by FPCR (including 2 that were negative by FPCR on day 60). Three dogs that were positive by FPCR on day 60 were re-treated and subsequently became both FPCR and FSS negative. One FPCR-positive dog developed a mild increase in serum ALP activity, another developed mild hypercalcemia, and a third developed diarrhea. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: A low-dose praziquantel/fenbendazole protocol may be effective for asymptomatic schistosomiasis in some dogs, but monitoring to ensure treatment success is recommended. Fecal saline sedimentation and FPCR may demonstrate discrepant results, with FPCR being positive more frequently.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33955589/