Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Treating Toxocara cati larvae in cats with milbemycin or emodepside
By Wolken, Sonja et al.·Published in Parasitology research·2012·Institute for Parasitology, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Treatment of third-stage larvae of Toxocara cati with milbemycin oxime plus praziquantel tablets and emodepside plus praziquantel spot-on formulation in experimentally infected cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 24 kittens was infected with a common intestinal parasite called Toxocara cati, which can cause health issues in cats. The kittens were treated with two different medications: one was a tablet combination of milbemycin oxime and praziquantel, and the other was a spot-on treatment of emodepside and praziquantel. The spot-on treatment was found to be highly effective, eliminating 98.5% of the parasites, while the tablet treatment did not work at all. Fortunately, no side effects were observed in any of the kittens during the study.
People also search for: kitten Toxocara cati treatment · cat deworming options · praziquantel for cats
Abstract
Toxocara cati is the most prevalent gastrointestinal helminth in cats worldwide, with cats of all ages at risk of infection. An anthelminthic treatment that not only affects the gut-dwelling stages of this parasite but is also effective against developmental stages in the tissue has the advantage that the pathology caused by migrating larvae is minimized and the need for repeated treatments is reduced. This study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of milbemycin oxime/praziquantel tablets (Milbemax®, Novartis) against third-stage larvae of T. cati in comparison to a spot-on formulation of emodepside and praziquantel (Profender®, Bayer). Twenty-four kittens were experimentally infected with T. cati and randomly allocated to three study groups. Treatments were performed at the minimum therapeutic dosage 5 days after the experimental infection. The development of patent infections was monitored and all cats were dewormed 50 days post-infection. Efficacies were calculated based on counts of excreted worms in the treated groups compared to a negative control group. Seven of the eight cats in the negative control group developed a patent T. cati infection and all cats were excreting worms at the end of the study (geometric mean worm count 18.1). No efficacy could be observed for the milbemycin oxime-treated animals. All cats developed a patent infection and excreted worms (geometric mean worm count 27.7). The treatment with Profender® was 98.5 % effective against L3 of T. cati. One cat developed a patent infection and was excreting worms at the end of the study (geometric mean worm count 0.3). No adverse reactions were noted in either treatment group.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22864864/