What are Heartworms?
Heartworm Disease is almost 100% preventable if a dog is on regular Heartworm Prevention
Heartworms are long, white worms that cause canine Heartworm Disease, a potentially fatal disease
Adult heartworms make a home in the dog’s heart and lungs; heartworms damage the organs and the blood vessels
Your dog needs a yearly test for Heartworm Disease
Dogs can only get heartworms from the bite of an infected moquito
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In early-stage heartworm disease, dogs may seem healthy and not have any symptoms. As the disease progresses dogs may lose weight, cough, get short of breath, and be fatigued.
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Dogs need to be on heartworm prevention every month. Heartworm medications are dosed differently depending on the brand. Prevention can be oral, topical or injectible and given monthly, or every 6 months, or once a year.
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If your dog's heartworm test is negative, you must keep him on prevention every month, missing a month puts him at risk of infection.
If your dog tests heartworm-positive, heartworm prevention alone will not get him well. A heartworm-positive dog needs heartworm treatment.
If your puppy is 8 weeks old, he's ready to begin heartworm prevention.
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The only way your dog can become infected is through the bite of an infected mosquito.
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No, dewormers destroy intestinal worms and have no effect on heartworms
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Heartworms eventually destroy the vasculature of the dogs’ lungs and heart and lead to death
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Humans cannot get heartworm disease.
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Your other dogs and cats can get heartworms if an infected mosquito bites your heartworm positive dog and then bites your other pets.
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FDA approved heartworm medications are prescription only.
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Yes, because there are pockets of mosquitos breeding even in cold climates and it only takes one infected mosquito to infect a dog.
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Yes, mosquitos come inside.
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In the early stages of heartworm disease most dogs seem healthy. However, as the worms have babies and travel and lodge inside the blood vessels of a dog, these worms make dogs very sick.