Heartworm disease is a serious and potentially fatal disease in companion animals. Dogs, cats, and ferrets can get heartworms, but the disease is different in each of these animals. Many wild animals also get heartworm. Wild animals are important carriers of the worm.
read more…Prevention of tick bites and flea infestations is a job that starts in spring with the emergence of bare ground and ends after the ground has a good snow cover, but if the insects are already in our house, there is no natural end to the season. Thus, it is very important to the health and safety of both the household humans and the pets to be diligent in preventing tick and flea problems. As discussed in Blogs #2 and #3, ticks can carry some severe diseases and fleas are a confounded nuisance.
read more…Fleas seem like the bane of our existence when their populations get out of control. A female flea lays about 50 eggs per day, producing up to 2,000 eggs in her lifetime. So just one female flea can cause an infestation in your home or yard. This problem gets particularly bad in the fall and early winter after the females have been laying eggs in and near our homes for months. Sometimes we are unaware of how serious the problem in our homes is until our pets get effective flea treatment, leaving the humans as the next best host.
read more…With spring comes sunshine, balmy days, mud and pests! Ticks are out and looking for food as soon as there is bare ground and they live and reproduce outside until the ground is covered with snow again. Ticks are sometimes a serious problem. Dog Ticks, common everywhere, are frequently assumed to not cause disease in humans or pets, but this is an error.
read more…As with our human family members, our companion animals suffer several ailments, some fatal, that can
be prevented with vaccinations. Most but not all of these illnesses are specific to the kind of animal but
some can be transmitted from pet to human. These include rabies and leptospirosis, both fatal and
largely untreatable diseases.