Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Spot-on with dinotefuran and permethrin kills Aedes aegypti
By Franc, Michel et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2012·Université, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Efficacy of dinotefuran, permethrin and pyriproxyfen combination spot-on against Aedes aegypti mosquitoes on dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of adult Beagle dogs was treated with a spot-on solution designed to repel and kill mosquitoes, specifically targeting Aedes aegypti. The treatment showed a strong anti-feeding effect, meaning that over 91% of mosquitoes did not feed on the dogs after treatment, and the insecticidal effect remained high, killing over 93% of mosquitoes for 28 days. No side effects were noted in any of the dogs after treatment. This combination product is also effective against fleas, ticks, and sand flies, making it a versatile option for pet owners concerned about insect bites.
People also search for: dog mosquito prevention · Beagle mosquito treatment · flea and tick spot-on for dogs · how to protect dogs from mosquitoes
Abstract
A spot-on formulation combining permethrin, dinotefuran and pyriproxyfen (Vectra 3D™ spot-on solution for dogs - one 10-25 kg pipette contains 196 mg dinotefuran, 1429 mg permethrin and 17 mg pyriproxyfen) was evaluated in adult Beagle dogs in a study designed to measure its efficacy to control Aedes aegypti (anti-feeding effect and mortality effect). The trial was performed according to Animal Welfare and Good Clinical Practice. Twelve dogs (five males and seven female, >3 years old, weighing 8.8-13.0 kg) were randomly allocated to treatment groups on pre-treatment mosquito counts: six dogs served as untreated controls, and six dogs were treated with the test formulation. Treatment consisted of applying a combination formulation to deliver at least 46.6 mg kg(-1) permethrin, 6.40 mg kg(-1) dinotefuran and 0.57 mg kg(-1) pyriproxyfen. The combination is designed to control fleas, ticks, sand flies and mosquitoes. Each dog was infested with approximately 100 adult unfed A. aegypti once before treatment (day 6) then at 1, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days post-treatment. Counts and engorgement determination of dead and live mosquitoes were performed after 1h exposure period. In the treated group (group A), the repellency effect of the product based on engorgement status (anti-feeding effect), was 91.5%, 94%, 94.7%, 94% and 87% at 1, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days post-treatment. Mortality effect or insecticidal efficacy calculated at the end of the 1-h exposure was almost identical when calculated 24h after the 1-h exposure and remained above 93% until the end of the in-life phase. No adverse events were observed following treatment, including observations conducted 2, 4 and 24h after the last dog was treated.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22709947/