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HELP!!!!!!!!!!! attack of the worms!!!!!!!!!

Discussion in 'Dogs - all breeds / types' started by Trips_mommy, Jan 17, 2006.

  1. Trips_mommy

    Trips_mommy New Member

    My dog Trip is an outside dog during the day and inside at night. There is anouther dog and two cats that the almost never come incontact with. We have had him for almost a year and every three months he has worms; round, tape and whatever that other one is. He is getting his flea med when he is supposed to. What is the problem? what could be the cause of this?
     
  2. boditosabear

    boditosabear New Member

    the worms are in the poop . Your dogs poop and all other infected dog's poop along the way. It is very important to round up all the poop bury it and stay on the vets treatment. we kept bodi from the dog parks but it seems if you look around there is poop everywere.. good luck
     
  3. Trips_mommy

    Trips_mommy New Member

    Don't they have to eat the poop to get worms? He only has to take one pill that kills everything
     
  4. Mary_NH

    Mary_NH New Member

    what meds are you giving him? Over the counter or vet prescribed?
    There are different meds for different parasites.
    If it's something over the counter you've been wasting your money. You would need to take a fecal to the vet to find out exactly what parasite he has and get the correct medication for them to leave. And clean up the poop - he could be eating it when you aren't looking.
     
  5. Samsintentions

    Samsintentions New Member

    My dogs are on Interceptor. Its heartworm, roundworm, whipworm, tapeworm...ect..

    Covers everything.

    they get worms from infested feces. They do not have to eat the poo. Just walking around where it is, they get the eggs and larve on their feet. Then when they lick their feet the injest the eggs and larve, and start the cycle all over again.
     
  6. Trips_mommy

    Trips_mommy New Member

    the meds we keep getting are prescribed but it seems about every three months he gets it again.
     
  7. Trips_mommy

    Trips_mommy New Member

    I like this interceptor, but I have a couple questions about it:

    Can you request it from the vet or is it harder to find?
    I assume I have to have him tested for heartworm in order to get it?
    Is it a monthly pill?
     
  8. Jamiya

    Jamiya New Member

    You have to get Interceptor from the vet. You do have to test for heartworm before they will give it to you, but you should be doing that anyway. It is a monthly pill. If you have more than one animal, you should treat all of them or they will just keep passing it back and forth.
     
  9. Mary_NH

    Mary_NH New Member

    interceptor works for flea control but does it kill intestinal parasites?
    I was looking online and all I see that it works for is fleas. If the dog had the parasites prior to giving monthly interceptor will it kill the intestinal parasites the dog may already have had?
    I'd still take a fecal sample to the vet to find out what the parasites are and treat accordingly
     
  10. coppersmom

    coppersmom New Member

    Tapeworms require an intermediate host which is the flea. The dog must ingest a flea to get tapeworms. I just went through that with my dogs. Brie has/had tapeworms and I wanted to treat Zoey too because she is a known poop-eater. The vet said it's only passed in the flea so no need to treat her. And so far, no sign of them in her.

    My dogs get Heartguard Plus which prevents the other worms but doesn't treat an infestation.
     
  11. Samsintentions

    Samsintentions New Member

    No the Interceptor I have is a heartworm and intestinal parasites pill. It dosn't say anything about fleas or ticks...
     
  12. hermann muenster

    hermann muenster New Member

    I use interceptor all year round - we don't have mosquitoes in the winter but it is worth it to not have to worry about worms - YUK! Besides - if I give them the interceptor all year - I don't have to have a blood test for heartworm or do stool tests every year.

    Frontline Plus is what I use for fleas. It has a tick killer in it too.
    I use it every other month during the flea season. My dogs hate the heat and are inside most of the summer so I don't have major flea worries.

    Worms are the grossest things to deal with. Good luck.
     
  13. Jamiya

    Jamiya New Member

    Yup. I get fosters with tapeworms all the time, and not one of them even has a flea on them. They must get them from ingesting fleas from other dogs at the shelter, or possibly from before they were treated for fleas. My dogs never get it (since there are no fleas) and one pill gets rid of the tapes. They are re-absorbed in the body so you don't even see dead worms in the stool.

    Roundworms are a different ballgame. I don't know much about those, since we haven't had them (yet).

    Raw pumpkin seeds can be a good defense against worms. They are sold in the refrigerated section of the health food store. There is also a nice natural worm treatment here: http://www.naturalpetremedy.com/worm_gone_herbal_pet_remedy.htm.

    Your vet should be able to help. He should tell you how to treat your dog for the specific kind of worms she has, and how to treat your yard if necessary and the other animals as well. You should get a fecal done - your dog might have hookworms, which require the yard to be treated.
     
  14. Shineillusion

    Shineillusion New Member

    There's more than one type of tapeworm. The most common one dogs get is indeed from ingesting an infected flea, but there are also tapeworms they can get from eating infected rodents, like mice, rats, and especially rabbits.

    Roundworms also present a special problem. Once your dog has them, they larvae are always present in the dog. They form cysts and under the right circumstances can become active again. This is how pregnant dogs can pass roundworm to their puppies in utero even if they don't have an active infestation during the pregnancy.

    Hookworms and whipworms can be contracted from infected bird droppings, not just other dogs or cats. And it's next to impossible to keep birds from dropping in your yard.
     

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