calliecritturs
Posted : 10/1/2006 10:52:27 PM
Heartguard tends to be less reliable -- and it ONLY works on heartworm microfilaria. I use Interceptor because not only does it work on heartworm microfilaria, it also helps protect against other nasty parasites like whips and hooks.
The problem is this -- ivermectin or milbemycin (Heartguard or Interceptor) only stay IN the body for 24 hours. When they are called 'preventives' it only means they prevent the **maturation** of the heartworm microfilaria. It doesn't prevent them from getting 'infected' in the first place.
If you give your last dose of heartworm 'preventive' on October 1, and your dog gets bitten by an infected mosquito on October 3rd -- that dog HAS BEEN infected. And if you don't give preventive til the spring then you have to test, etc. -- AND if ... in that period ... the dog has gotten infected, you've given the heartworm like 6 months to mature and you may then have to go thru treatment with the dog. THAT is tough on the dog.
This is why they are advocating year round protection -- also, with the advent of fruit and veggies being SO transported all over the place, that load of bananas from Mexico may contain mosquitos that travel home in your groceries and so you get a stray mosquito that may bite your dog and THEN die.
Using a product like Heartguard or Interceptor is minimally problematic -- it doesn't stay in the dog's system long term (Revolution, however, stays IN the bloodstream at least for that whole month) so the impact on the body is pretty minimal for the risk it reduces. I use Interceptor and would do it year round no matter where I lived simply because of the reduced risk of other parasites.
No one will hate you if you don't use it -- it's really all about how much 'risk' you are willing to take. I give mine Interceptor and then give them milk thistle for 3-4 days afterward just to mitigate my own damages and help the body eject traces of anything that might remain and help the body cope with it. But going THRU heartworm treatment is VERY VERY hard on the dog -- and frankly I'll do about anything to reduce the risk of that.