Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Milpro tablets kill adult Echinococcus worms in dogs and cats
By Cvejic, Dejan et al.·Published in Parasitology research·2016·KLIFOVET AG, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Efficacy of a single dose of milbemycin oxime/praziquantel combination tablets, Milpro(®), against adult Echinococcus multilocularis in dogs and both adult and immature E. multilocularis in young cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
Ten dogs and ten cats were given a single dose of a medication called Milpro to treat a tapeworm infection caused by Echinococcus multilocularis. The dogs received their treatment 18 days after infection, while the cats were treated either 7 or 18 days post-infection. After treatment, none of the animals that received Milpro had any worms, while the untreated animals had many worms. The treatment was effective and well-tolerated, showing a 100% success rate in eliminating the infection in both dogs and cats.
People also search for: dog tapeworm treatment · cat Echinococcus infection · Milpro for dogs and cats · how to treat tapeworms in pets
Abstract
Two single-site, laboratory, negatively controlled, masked, randomised dose confirmation studies were performed: one in dogs, the other in cats. After a period of acclimatisation, both the dogs and cats were orally infected with Echinococcus multilocularis protoscoleces. In the dog study, 10 dogs received a single dose of Milpro® tablets at a minimum dose of 0.5 mg/kg milbemycin oxime and 5 mg/kg praziquantel 18 days post-infection and 10 dogs received no treatment. In the cat study, 10 cats received a single dose of Milpro® tablets at a minimum dose of 2 mg/kg milbemycin oxime and 5 mg/kg praziquantel 7 days post-infection, 10 cats received a single dose of the treatment 18 days post-infection and 10 cats remained untreated. In both studies, intestinal worm counts were performed 23 days post-infection at necropsy. No worms were retrieved from any of the 30 treated animals. Nine of 10 control dogs had multiple worms (geometric mean 91, arithmetic mean 304) and all 10 control cats had multiple worms (geometric mean 216, arithmetic mean 481). The difference in worm counts between all three treated groups and their controls was highly significant (ANOVA p values of log transformed data <0.0001). Efficacy of 100 % was demonstrated for the elimination of adult E. multilocularis in dogs and cats as well as for elimination of immature E. multilocularis in cats as evidenced by the effectiveness of treatment 7 days post-infection. The treatments were well accepted and tolerated, and there were no adverse drug reactions observed.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26660919/