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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Year-long flea and tick control in Aeolian cats with imidacloprid

By Otranto, Domenico et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2017·Dipartimento di Medicina Veterinaria, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Season-long control of flea and tick infestations in a population of cats in the Aeolian archipelago using a collar containing 10% imidacloprid and 4.5% flumethrin.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats living in the Aeolian archipelago were treated with a collar that contains 10% imidacloprid and 4.5% flumethrin to prevent flea and tick infestations. Over a year, the cats wearing the collar showed a significant drop in flea infestations, with only 3.8% affected by the end of the study, compared to 49% in untreated cats. Remarkably, none of the cats wearing the collar had ticks at any point, while untreated cats had up to 17.5% infested with ticks during follow-ups. This collar proved to be highly effective in keeping these cats free from fleas and ticks, which can carry diseases.

People also search for: cat flea prevention collar · tick prevention for cats · how to treat fleas in cats

Abstract

Cats that have outdoor access are highly exposed to ticks, fleas, mites and flying insects, though the risk to become infested by arthropods is less perceived in cats than in dogs. This has resulted in fewer treatment and prevention options being available for cats than for dogs. A collar containing a combination of 10% imidacloprid and 4.5% flumethrin (Seresto, Bayer Animal Health) is available for cats and licensed with claims against ticks and fleas for 7-8 months. Following the assessment of the efficacy of the collar against Leishmania infantum infection in privately owned cats living in the Aeolian archipelago, herein we report the efficacy of the collar in the treatment and prevention of tick and flea infestations in the same population of cats over a period of one year of observation. At the inclusion day (Study Day 0, SD 0), cats were visited and examined for ectoparasites (i.e., flea combing and tick thumb counts) and allocated to group 1 (G1; n=104; cats treated with Serestocollar) or group 2 (G2; n=100; untreated controls) and further checked at SDs 210, 270 and 360 (study closure). At SD 0, G1 and G2 had a comparable percentage of cats infested by fleas (45.2% and 49.0%; χ=0.164; P=0.6859) and ticks (6.7% and 14.0%; χ=2.946; P=0.0861). The number of cats infested by fleas was reduced in G1, being 8.3%, 0% and 3.8% on SDs 210, 270 and 360, respectively, resulting in efficacies against fleas of 79.4%, 100% and 93.6% on SDs 210, 270 and 360. None of the cats in G1 was found infested by ticks after the application of the collar, whereas in G2 ticks were observed on 15.7%, 4.8%, 17.5% of the cats at the different follow up visits, leading to an overall efficacy against ticks of 100%. A total of 375 ectoparasites were collected from cats, being 249 fleas (six Ctenocephalides canis, 240 Ctenocephalides felis and three Nosopsyllus fasciatus) and 126 ticks (87 Ixodes ventalloi and 39 Rhipicephalus pusillus). Field data gathered herein confirm a high efficacy of the collar in the prevention of tick and flea infestations on cats. This is of great importance both for the primary role of fleas and ticks as blood feeding parasites and, more importantly, because of their role as vectors of pathogens causing diseases of veterinary and medical importance.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29173546/