Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Fluralaner tablets prevent Babesia canis in dogs from ticks
By Taenzler, Janina et al.·Published in Parasites & vectors·2015·MSD Animal Health Innovation GmbH, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Prevention of transmission of Babesia canis by Dermacentor reticulatus ticks to dogs treated orally with fluralaner chewable tablets (Bravecto™).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 16 dogs was tested for Babesia canis, a parasite spread by Dermacentor reticulatus ticks, to see if a single dose of fluralaner chewable tablets (Bravecto) could prevent infection. The dogs were divided into two groups: one received the treatment while the other did not. All untreated dogs became infected, but none of the treated dogs showed any signs of infection throughout the study. This shows that fluralaner is highly effective at preventing the transmission of Babesia canis from ticks for at least 12 weeks after treatment.
People also search for: dog tick prevention · Bravecto for dogs · Babesia canis symptoms in dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The preventive effect of fluralaner chewable tablets (Bravecto™) against transmission of Babesia canis by Dermacentor reticulatus ticks was evaluated. METHODS: Sixteen dogs, tested negative for B. canis by PCR and IFAT, were allocated to two study groups. On day 0, dogs in one group (n = 8) were treated once orally with a fluralaner chewable tablet according to label recommendations and dogs in the control group (n = 8) remained untreated. On days 2, 28, 56, 70 and 84, dogs were infested with 50 (±4) B. canis infected D. reticulatus ticks with tick in situ thumb counts 48 ± 4 h post-infestation. Prior to each infestation, the D. reticulatus ticks were confirmed to harbour B. canis by PCR analysis. On day 90, ticks were counted and removed from all dogs. Efficacy against ticks was calculated for each assessment time point. After treatment, all dogs were physically examined in conjunction with blood collection for PCR every 7 days, blood samples for IFAT were collected every 14 days and the dog's rectal body temperature was measured thrice weekly. From dogs displaying symptoms of babesiosis or were PCR positive, a blood smear was taken, and, if positive, dogs were rescue treated and replaced with a replacement dog. The preventive effect was evaluated by comparing infected dogs in the treated group with infected dogs in the untreated control group. RESULTS: All control dogs became infected with B. canis, as confirmed by PCR and IFAT. None of the 8 treated dogs became infected with B. canis, as IFAT and PCR were negative throughout the study until day 112. Fluralaner chewable tablet was 100 % effective against ticks on days 4, 30, 58, and 90 and an efficacy of 99.6 % and 99.2 % was achieved on day 72 and day 86 after treatment, respectively. Over the 12-week study duration, a 100 % preventive effect against B. canis transmission was demonstrated. CONCLUSIONS: A single oral administration of fluralaner chewable tablets effectively prevented the transmission of B. canis by infected D. reticulatus ticks over a 12-week period.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26040319/