Central/Northern Cali People - heartworm question

    • Gold Top Dog

    Central/Northern Cali People - heartworm question

    We live in So Cali and none of the vets down here use a heartworm preventative unless the dog will be travelling out of the area.  DH, Rory and I are going for a few days up to Groveland/Yosemite and then over to the Carmel/Monterey area.  Do dogs in this area get treated for heartworm?  Out vet wasnt sure and suggested I call vets up there and I am going to, but I thought I would check here too.  Also, if we do put her on a preventative, how long before the trip should we give to her and how long after would we need to continue it? 

    Another heartworm question - can a dog get heartworm or west nile or whatever from eating a mosquito or does it have to be bit?  Rory ate a big one last nite and it creeped me out!

    • Gold Top Dog

    Davis is in the central valley, a bit farther  north than Yosemite, but I give the HW treatment all year long.  This year seems especially bad for mosquitoes in a lot of areas so I wouldn't take the chance. I know you can buy the HW treatment just a  month at a time if you want because I did that for a little while before we knew whether Max was going to top out over or under 50 lbs. If I remember right, it was about $10.00 for one month.

    Joyce

    • Gold Top Dog

    I agree with Joyce in that I wouldn't want to take any chances. Your vet should be able to tell you which would be best for short-term use and when to start and stop it.

    I don't think that they can get heartworm from ingesting a mosquito and if heartworm isn't a problem in your area, it should be fine.

     

    • Gold Top Dog

    I would get a dose of Interceptor and give it to her when you get home. Interceptor works on the previous 30-45 days, it's not a lasting thing, it's out of their systems in 24 hours. It just kind of sweeps through and kills the makings of heartworms. I don't know how Heartguard and stuff work, but I'd do Interceptor. JMO

    • Gold Top Dog

    Oops!  Forgot to mention one thing ... if your dog is the HW treatment only at certain times of the year, your vet might insist on a HW test before giving you any of  the meds.

    Joyce

    • Gold Top Dog

    jenn52
    Another heartworm question - can a dog get heartworm or west nile or whatever from eating a mosquito or does it have to be bit?  Rory ate a big one last nite and it creeped me out! 

    Heartworm larvae can't survive the digestive tract.  I doubt West Nile can either.

    jenn52
    Also, if we do put her on a preventative, how long before the trip should we give to her and how long after would we need to continue it? 

    A heartworm "preventative" is a pesticide that "prevents" adult heartworms by killing existing heartworm larvae.  If your dog has no larvae, then there is no point in giving a "preventative".  Interceptor and Heartgard will kill heartworm larvae until the larvae are about 45-days-old (time since the mosquito bite), so just give a dose of "preventative" when you get back home (unless you are planning a longer trip).  Both of those "preventatives" are out of the dog's system within 48 hours.

    If a dog already has adult female heartworms, a heartworm "preventative" will also kill the initial baby heartworms (microfilaria).  Otherwise, the microfilaria die of old age if they are not sucked up into a mosquito.

    Think about Interceptor and Heartgard as heartworm baby/larvae pesticides and forget about the word "preventative".  I believe things will make more sense that way.  The pesticides that kill adult heartworms are called heartworm "treatments".

    See these two posts on heartworms for more details:

    Yearly heartworm tests are a really good idea regardless of whether a dog is on a "preventative" year round and regardless of the prevalence of heartworms in the area.  "Preventatives" are not foolproof and an infected dog next door puts one in a danger area if the weather stays warm.  Of course, if you have no mosquitos, you will have no heartworms.

    The cheaper test for microfilaria is pointless if a dog is on a "preventative".  The antigen test for adult females is more reliable anyway.