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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Which topical tick treatments work best on mixed-breed dogs for brown

By Varloud, Marie & Fourie, Josephus J·Published in Parasitology research·2015·Ceva Sant&#xe9, France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: One-month comparative efficacy of three topical ectoparasiticides against adult brown dog ticks (Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato) on mixed-bred dogs in controlled environment.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of mixed-breed dogs was tested for effectiveness against brown dog ticks using three different topical treatments. The dogs were treated with either Vectra 3D, Frontline Plus, or K9 Advantix and then infested with ticks multiple times over a month. The results showed that Vectra 3D and K9 Advantix provided better protection, with Vectra 3D offering over 90% effectiveness in keeping ticks away for a month. Frontline Plus was less effective, especially after the first week.

People also search for: dog tick treatment options · best tick prevention for dogs · Vectra 3D vs Frontline Plus for ticks

Abstract

This study was designed to compare the therapeutic and residual efficacy for 1 month of three topical ectoparasiticides on mixed-bred dogs against the brown dog tick, Rhipicephalus sanguineus. Adult dogs (n = 32, 10.8-18.4 kg BW) were allocated to 4 groups (n = 8) and infested with 50 adult ticks on days -8, -2, 7, 14, 21, and 28. Within each group, dogs were treated topically on day 0 with a control solution (CS), Vectra 3D (DPP), Frontline Plus (FM), or K9 Advantix (IP). Ticks were enumerated on dogs 24 h after treatment and each subsequent tick infestation by in situ thumb count assessment without removal and at 48 h by combing and removal. Acaricidal efficacy was calculated using arithmetic means for all 24 and 48 h tick count assessments. From 42 to 56% of the total, infested ticks were found on dogs 48 h post-challenge in the CS group. Therapeutic efficacy for all treatments ranged from 45.5 to 64.6% after 48 h of infestation. Residual efficacy after FM treatment was consistently lower compared to DPP or IP treatments at the 24 h assessments on days 8, 22, 23, and 29. Residual efficacy measured at this last time point was 94.8% for DPP, 83.1% for IP, and 46.9% for FM. This study demonstrates that permethrin-based formulations (DPP and IP) provided a quicker onset of residual protection against brown dog ticks compared to FM. Although DPP and IP are both permethrin-based formulations, DPP exhibited consistently higher residual acaricidal efficacies and was the only treatment that provided >90% protection for 1 month at 24 h post challenge.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25656465/