calliecritturs
Posted : 5/1/2009 10:12:12 PM
Honestly it's tough to imagine an area worse for heartworm than Florida -- of dogs that go thru rescue here approximately 93% are heartworm positive when they come from Animal Control or the humane society.
I don't disagree at all with speaking with your vet about it -- and none of my vets (neither holistic nor the 'regular' vet) have any problem whatsoever with my dividing tablets. Early on there was a concern with medication being distributed in the tablets, but that is apparently not the case any more (again according to my vet). And I **DO** get my Interceptor FROM the vet.
However ... my point is this. Interceptor actually guarantees their product for not just heartworm prevention but also hooks and whips. If you look at the dose chart for either milbemycin or ivermectin (which is what's in heartguard) the amount of the drug varies for the type of parasite it is going to be effective against. The dose for hooks/whips is far far greater than the dose for heartworm microfilaria. The dose that is used in that package is sufficient to dose the animal at the upper range of size against the hardier parasites (hooks/whips).
The original post was talking about a dog who is on the lower end of the 'range'. Literally just 2-3 pounds over the low end of the dose range. By all means, do whatever your vet says, but remember these drugs are all dosed "per pound". They are simply packaged in a size that is sufficient for dogs in the upper range.
In any event the 'range' per pound for milbemycin is something like .23 mg to .43 mg. per pound. That takes into account that with milbemycin it's about double the typical dose for hooks/whips as opposed to heartworm microfilaria. But milbemycin is simply dosed far more liberally because it is so much more easily tolerated (the statistic that the PIll Book gives is that milbemycin is well-tolerated at up to more than 100 times the normal dose and even in collies it's tolerated at over 10 times the dose). But that's one of the reasons why the ranges are so large and why they guarantee the product for more than just heartworm "prevention".
I'm honestly not talking about a short dose -- particularly not for a dog that is at the low end of the package stated range. AS LONG AS we're talking about heartworm microfilaria. Now if you're using it to control hooks/whips that IS another story entirely. Then you need to stay within the guidelines.