calliecritturs
Posted : 8/11/2010 6:47:51 PM
juliemule
The vet said interceptor, heartgard, tri heart all are not working. I checked with a couple other clinics and they all agree. To top it off our farm borders a wetland refuge.
I find that hard to believe -- Interceptor isn't known to fail because it's dosed FAR higher because milbemycin is SO much easier on the body and better tolerated. That's why Interceptor (and Sentinel) are guaranteed not just for heartworm, but for hooks and whips as well (and it takes a far higher dose of ivermectin or any drug to treat hooks/whips than heartworm microfilaria).
Heartworm microfilaria are pretty fragile -- that's why they've continually lowered the dose of ivermectin. If you look at the dose chart for various different parasites -- heartworm microfilaria is the easiest to kill of all.
But the goal wasn't to kill just microfilaria -- the *goal* was to make the drug acceptable to all dogs. And have it "Hopefully" kill the microfilaria. So the dose that's in HeartGuard, Tri-heart, etc. is SMALLER than the typical vet PDR dose charts of how much ivermectin to use to kill heartworm microfilaria
People have no real concept of what a huge moneymaker this is -- if you buy a bottle of Ivomec (which is the cattle/pig wormer) and then give the "dose" according to the Veterinary PDR for heartworm "prevention" (i.e., the dose to kill microfilaria) you can give that "preventive" dose to 14-15 dogs weighing 75 pounds each EVERY MONTH for the full 5 year shelf life of the bottle and you will STILL throw some away.
Price of bottle? About $45-$50. (it's the small bottle if you're looking it up)
Ok ... that's how much the drug costs at retail price. Realize now you've just protected 15 dogs for five years for under $50. Then multiply out how much it costs for HeartGuard for a 5 YEAR supply times 15. That's a lot of money. That's not even taking into consideration what the actual drug 'costs' to make ... this is just comparing retail costs.
Then figure that the actual "dose" in HeartGuard, et al is far far LESS than that dose you'd give of the liquid ivermectin. Because that "dose" of liquid ivermectin will STILL cause enormous problems in herding dogs. (This is how I *KNOW* all this -- I had a herder who was sensitive to ivermectin -- and I know exactly how much I gave me and how many times I tried to cut the dose in half to see if he'd be ok with it because at the time there WAS *no* milbemycin -- it hadn't been invented yet!)
Interceptor is, and always has been, a bit more expensive than HeartGuard -- but it's dosed like 10 times higher than even the original dose of ivermectin that was in HeartGuard. And if you read that same veterinaryh PDR about milbemycin you'll find that milbemycin is tested "safe" at up to 100 times the dose of ivermectin.
Why the huge doses? Because they USE huge doses of these drugs for other things. They use a dose of ivermectin that is 200 times *more* than the dose if ivermectin in HeartGuard to treat demodectic mange (and other parasites but the dose for deodex is g-normous in comparison to what's used for hooks, whips, ear mites and lungworm). But that's why they've never marketed it commercially -- because they can't market it to ALL dogs.