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Heartworms How Could Your Pet Get Heartworm Disease?
Monday, 22 June 2009
What Are Heartworms And How Do Animals Get Heartworm Disease?
Heartworms are bugs that attack an animal's heart and cause inborn heart problems if not detected. They are broadcast from animal to animal, after one is bit by an infected mosquito. Heartworms routinely live in the right ventricle of the heart and in the nearby blood vessels.

When a mosquito bites an animal with heartworms, it ingests up the baby worms and transmits them to the next animal it bites. Those worms now live in the heart of the just infected animal, where they become adults and start to reproduce.

Since heartworms can be spread simply from animal to animal, it's important to use defensive measures to guard your pet. Vets recommend heartworm prevention for all canines and as knowledge on heartworms in felines is inflating, prevention for felines is also becoming common.

guarantee you have your pet examined for heartworms before you start to give them preventatives- unless they are less than seven months old. If your pet is over seven months and is started on defensive heartworm medication without first testing, they are in danger for serious reactions to the medication.

Pups ought to be given a heartworm preventative by the time they are eight weeks old.

Pups ought to be checked out once they are seven months old even if they are being treated with preventive medication.

Dogs need to be tested on a consistent basis.

In cats, one heartworm may cause sudden death, but it is tough to test in kittens. You can start the preventative medication without a preliminary test.

The symptoms in felines are similar to those of other common feline sicknesses.

It is crucial to protect your pets from heartworms as it could be a lethal disease. A series of injections cause the adult heartworms living in the heart to die. The worms then repeatedly break up into smaller pieces until they are little enough for the body to absorb. While this is happening, the dog's heart is working harder than common so it's important the dog doesn't do any strenuous exercise for five weeks. After five weeks, the dog is given a one day treatment to rid its body of the baby worms. Be sure that your dog receives a follow up test 6 months after the treatment to ensure that the heartworms are gone. There are at the current time no heartworm treatments for kittens yet. The most effective way to treat a moggy infected with heartworms is to start using preventive medicines to help ease your cat's symptoms.
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Heartworms How Do Dogs And Cats Get Heartworm Disease?
Heartworm in cats.

Posted by trollins6 at 1:26 PM EDT
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