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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

Interview with a Heartworm Specialist: Part 2

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April 24, 2012 / (12) comments

Yesterday, I talked with Dr. Cristiano von Simson, Director of Veterinary Technical Services of Bayer HealthCare LLC, Animal Health Division, about how heartworm preventives work and a bit about the unique aspects of the heartworm disease in cats. Today, we’ll tackle the subject of drug resistance as it applies to heartworm disease.  Full disclosure: Bayer makes Advantage Multi, a product to which Dr. von Simson refers.

 

Dr. Coates: What do you have to say about the reports primarily coming from the southeastern United States about heartworm infection becoming more prevalent in dogs that by all reports have been on monthly, year round preventives?

Dr. von Simson: Years ago, the FDA announced that they were getting more reports about a lack of efficacy in heartworm prevention products. We also heard directly from veterinary practitioners in central and southern states that in addition to those cases where they didn’t think dogs had received all their preventive doses at the right time, which is unfortunately very common, they were also seeing cases where they were very confident that owners had given all the doses correctly and they believed that the product had really failed to prevent heartworm disease.

There have been some researchers working on this as well. Dr. Byron Blagburn is the one who really took the lead. He went there, collected some samples, took them to his lab, and did some in vitro assays and clinical studies on heartworms and the lack of efficacy of preventives. Dr. Dan Snyder did some work on that too, and so did researchers from the University of Georgia. So, there is a lot of information out there. I think the best summary that is available is in the American Heartworm Society’s new canine guidelines that have just been revised.

What they are saying, and I’ll paraphrase here, is that in some areas, certain isolates of heartworm show some resistance to preventive products. In clinical studies where dogs are infected with one strain of heartworm called MP3 that was isolated in Georgia, several different preventive products were challenged by Dr. Blagburn and only one was able to prevent 100 percent of heartworm cases, and that was Advantage Multi. The other monthly products that were tested had seven out of eight dogs in their groups develop heartworms in that trial. Some other studies by Dr. Snyder corroborated that evidence of failure.

So this is sort of a new area. We thought we knew everything about heartworms, but there’s a lot of new evidence and we’re still trying to understand the mechanisms of resistance and why we’re seeing heartworms now and where those resistant isolates are.

Dr. Coates: How do you recommend that owners use this information?

Dr. von Simson: The biggest problem we have today is still the number of dogs and cats that are not on prevention or are not on 12 doses all year round. Talk to your veterinarian about what the best product is for your pet. That will depend on a series of factors, including the spectrum of the product. The Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) recommends broad spectrum products that will kill heartworms and intestinal parasites (including whipworms). So the veterinarian and owner should discuss the best parasite prevention protocol, including the topic of resistant strains of heartworms, and choose a product that will give peace of mind.

 

*

 

Do you have any questions for Dr. von Simson? He has graciously offered his time to provide answers; so ask away and I’ll pass on the ones that get the most "likes".

 

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Image: Dog portrait 2 by Tambako The Jaguar / via Flickr

 

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COMMENTS (12)
1
Medications
by TheOldBroad on 04/24/2012 07:36am

Are there any dangers associated with changing the type of preventative utilized? Can there be any danger of residual medication from the previous dose mixing with a different brand?

2
Medicating Cats
by ashmom on 04/24/2012 08:28am

With indoor cats I don't treat them for fleas, ticks, etc. Of course mosquitos can get in the house, so if I did treat for heartworm can it be just part of the year (Northeast)- assuming the winters aren't always as mild as this past one! What about older, sick, immune-compromised, etc cats. Thanks for any more info.

3
heartworm meds
by Kayteenm on 04/24/2012 08:39am

First, I have to take issue with Dr VonSimpson being an employee of Bayer. Of course he would want dogs and cats on year round prevention. But one question - what is the incidence of dogs and cats with intestinal parasites? My dog goes out and finds a lot of dead things that he chews on plus he does a lot of digging for critters. Everytime I have him tested for parasites he comes back negative. So, really, do we need administer a broad spectrum parasite prevention EVERY MONTH?? Seems like a lot of "insecticide" to be putting into a dogs body. Would you take an insecticide every month "just in case"? Why would I give one to my best friend? Plus, I live in Colorado where the year round protection is a little over the top.

by descendingdaphne on 04/24/2012 11:00pm

"My dog goes out and finds a lot of dead things that he chews on plus he does a lot of digging for critters. Everytime I have him tested for parasites he comes back negative. So, really, do we need administer a broad spectrum parasite prevention EVERY MONTH?? Seems like a lot of "insecticide" to be putting into a dogs body. Would you take an insecticide every month "just in case"?"

Um, yeah...if I chewed on dead things, dug around in the dirt, ate feces, etc., or did any of the things our pets are wont to do, I would take a monthly broad-spectrum parasiticide, just to be safe!. :)

Also, keep in mind that routine fecal checks (especially flotations without centrifugation) are hardly 100% accurate. That doesn't mean that they're worthless, but they can't be used to rule out GI parasites.

4
Parasites
by CP on 04/24/2012 10:21am

Unfortunately I live in GA but have never heard of a form of heartworm isolated here. Will have to ask my vet. As much as I hate giving my dog year round preventative, I believe it is quite necessary here. This year bug infestations will be even greater due to the very mild winter. Ticks are already prevalent which is highly unusual.

5
This comment seems off
by jlhwebgal on 04/24/2012 11:47am

In the article the comment was made:

"The biggest problem we have today is still the number of dogs and cats that are not on prevention or are not on 12 doses all year round. Talk to your veterinarian about what the best product is for your pet. That will depend on a series of factors, including the spectrum of the product."

If HW is transmitted mostly from infected mosquitoes who get the disease from wildlife and farm animals and it is not as prevalent in the companion canine population how does this comment hold any water?

by Tracy Dion on 04/28/2012 06:41am

Add to this the fact that 80% of infected cats throw off the infection naturally (http://www.littlebigcat.com/health/heartworm-in-cats/), and you really have to question the logic behind universally feeding insecticides to our feline friends at all, never mind year-round!

Tracy
www.CatCentric.org

6
Thank-you Dr. Von Simson
by kay morris on 04/24/2012 07:13pm

My question, what is the life span, of the Heart-Worm ? This may be be a old wife's tale, I was told. if a dog has heart worms, put on Heart worm medication, to keep baby worms out of the blood stream. The old ones will die in 7 years ?

by descendingdaphne on 04/24/2012 11:17pm

Straight from the American Heartworm Association's treatment guidelines:

"Slow-kill methods using continuous monthly administration of prophylactic doses of any macrocyclic lactone are NOT RECOMMENDED. While effective in reducing the life span of juvenile and adult heartworms, it appears that the older the worms are when first exposed to macrocyclic lactones, the longer it takes for them to die. The adulticidal effect of macrocyclic lactones may take more than two years of continuous administration before adult heartworms are eliminated completely, and rigid exercise restriction would still be required for the entire treatment period. Throughout this period, the infection would persist and pathology would continue to worsen. Another potential concern in using macrocyclic lactones long-term in heartworm positive dogs as stand-alone therapy is the potential for selection of resistant sub-populations of heartworms."

7
Generic Heartworm Meds?
by Rene Agredano on 04/25/2012 05:06pm

I was recently sold generic heartworm preventative by my vet. I'm a little skeptical but I bought it anyways because it was all she had in stock. Can you tell me if the efficacy of generic preventative has been tested against non-generic? Thanks.

by Dr. Jennifer Coates on 04/26/2012 08:17am

I had just completed a post that will run next week answering other questions that had been posed when yours came through, so I'll address this one here.

Your generic heartworm medication should be just as effective as the brand name version but make sure you are comparing apples to apples. For example, if your generic contains ivermectin only and the brand name you were previously using contained ivermectin and pyrantel pamoate, the latter will also kill roundworms and hookworms and the new medication will not.

by Rene Agredano on 04/27/2012 01:40pm

Thank you Dr. Coates, I hadn't even thought of doing that. I'll go take a look. I sincerely appreciate your time and response.

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About fully vetted

Jennifer Coates, DVM

Photo of Dr Coates

Image credit: Jim Piraino

...graduated with honors from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 1999. In the years since, she has practiced veterinary medicine in Virginia, Wyoming, and Colorado. She is the author of several books about veterinary medicine and animal care, including the Dictionary of Veterinary Terms: Vet-Speak Deciphered for the Non-Veterinarian. Dr. Coates also writes short stories that focus on the strength and importance of the human-animal bond, and freelance articles relating to a variety of animal care and veterinary topics. Dr. Coates lives in Fort Collins, Colorado with her husband, daughter, and various species of pets.

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