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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Preventing kitten roundworm from mother cat with Profender spot-on

By Böhm, Claudia et al.·Published in Parasitology research·2015·Bayer Animal Health GmbH, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Prevention of Lactogenic Toxocara cati Infections in Kittens by Application of an Emodepside/Praziquantel Spot-on (Profender®) to the Pregnant Queen.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of pregnant cats was treated with a topical solution containing emodepside and praziquantel to prevent their kittens from getting a common roundworm infection called Toxocara cati. The treatment was given late in the pregnancy, and it was found to be highly effective, with 7 out of 8 kittens born to treated mothers being free of the infection. In contrast, all kittens from untreated mothers were infected. The treatment showed no side effects, making it a safe option for preventing this type of worm infection in newborn kittens.

People also search for: cat roundworm prevention · pregnant cat deworming · kitten Toxocara cati treatment

Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of an emodepside 2.1 % (w/v)/praziquantel 8.6 % (w/v) topical solution (Profender&#xae; spot-on for cats) in the prevention of lactogenic Toxocara cati infections. A controlled test was performed with two groups of 8 cats with confirmed pregnancy. All cats were infected with daily doses of 2000 T. cati eggs for 10 consecutive days starting 50 days post conception to produce an acute infection. Treatment was performed 60 days post conception. Queens in the treatment group received the emodepside/praziquantel solution at the minimum therapeutic dose (3 mg/kg emodepside and 12 mg/kg praziquantel), while the control group was treated with a placebo spot-on. Efficacy was evaluated 56 days post partum by necropsy of one randomly selected kitten of each litter and comparison of the worm burdens between the study groups. Additionally the necropsy results were supported by quantification of worms expelled with the faeces after deworming of the remaining kittens and all queens. The treatment in late pregnancy resulted in an efficacy of 98.7 % (p < 0.0001). All necropsied control kittens were infected (geometric mean 30.6). Seven of 8 kittens from treated mothers were free of T. cati (geometric mean 0.4). Worm counts after deworming reflected the results obtained at necropsy. No side effects of the treatment were observed. It is concluded that treatment with an emodepside/praziquantel spot-on solution during late pregnancy effectively prevents lactogenic transmission of T. cati to the offspring. The study design facilitated the generation of reliable data, while at the same time a minimum number of animals was sacrificed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26152418/