Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
New chewable worm medicine works well and tastes good for dogs
By Schmid, K et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2010·Intervet Innovation, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Efficacy, safety and palatability of a new broad-spectrum anthelmintic formulation in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs was given a new flavored chewable tablet to treat various types of intestinal worms, including Toxocara canis and Echinococcus granulosus. The treatment was highly effective, clearing over 99% of the worms in most cases, and was well-received by the dogs, with 87.5% happily eating the tablets. Safety tests showed no serious side effects, although two dogs did vomit after receiving a higher dose, but they tolerated the treatment well when given again later. Overall, this new anthelmintic tablet appears to be a safe and effective option for treating worm infections in dogs.
People also search for: dog worm treatment · flavored chewable worm medicine for dogs · Toxocara canis treatment in dogs
Abstract
The efficacy, safety and palatability of a new flavoured chewable anthelmintic tablet were investigated in dogs. The efficacy, based on worm counts, of a single recommended therapeutic dose (RTD) of 5 mg pyrantel + 20 mg oxantel + 5 mg praziquantel/kg bodyweight was assessed in experimental infections (EI) and natural infections (NI) with Trichuris vulpis, Echinococcus granulosus and Toxocara canis. For T vulpis, the efficacy of the treatment was 99.3 per cent in EI (comparing groups of six treated and six control dogs) and 100 per cent in NI (nine treated and nine control dogs). For E granulosus, the efficacy was more than 99.9 per cent in EI (11 treated and 11 control dogs). For T canis, the efficacy was 94.3 per cent in EI (10 treated and 10 control dogs) and 100 per cent in NI (12 treated and 13 control dogs). In a field study, Ancylostoma caninum (11 dogs) and T canis (11 dogs) faecal egg counts were reduced by more than 99 per cent, and in eight dogs with Dipylidium caninum proglotides in the faeces the efficacy was 100 per cent. The tablets were readily consumed by 56 of 64 (87.5 per cent) privately owned dogs. Safety was assessed in groups of six dogs treated either once with twice the RTD, once with six times the RTD, with twice the RTD on three consecutive days, or untreated. There were no significant differences in blood parameters between the groups, and no abnormal clinical findings. Two dogs treated with six times the RTD vomited, but no vomiting was observed when administration was repeated two days later.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21257464/