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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.

 

The Safe Use of Ivermectin

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January 08, 2013 / (8) comments


I had an especially sad euthanasia appointment a while back. A litter of puppies had eaten feces from several horses that had been dewormed with ivermectin. Enough of the medication passed through the horse’s body and out in the manure that when the dogs ate the feces, they ingested toxic amounts of the drug.

 

The owners were unaware of what had happened until the dogs began to fall ill. Treatment had failed to save the puppy that developed symptoms first. Meanwhile two more had died, and the owners called me out to euthanize the sole remaining puppy that was in a coma.

My clients were obviously heartbroken and felt terrible that their puppies had died from a preventable poisoning. Let me take this opportunity to review some basic information about ivermectin.

Ivermectin is a member of the macrocytic lactone class of parasiticides. It is commonly used as a heartworm preventative in small animals and for the treatment of certain types of external (e.g., mites) and internal parasites in many different species. The difference between the safe use of ivermectin and poisoning is all about the dose and an animal’s inherent sensitivity to the drug. Some dogs carry a gene (MDR1 or ABCB1) that makes doses of ivermectin and other drugs that are safe for the general population dangerous to those individuals.

I’m going to focus on dogs from here on out since they were involved in 282 of the 318 potentially toxic ivermectin exposures reported to the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center during 2008–2009. Typical doses for ivermectin in dogs are:

 

  • 6 ug/kg for heartworm prevention

  • 300 ug/kg for treatment of sarcoptic mange

  • 400-600 ug/kg for treatment of demodectic mange

 

Non-sensitive breeds generally need to be exposed to more than 2,000 ug/kg before significant symptoms develop, but the potentially toxic dose in MDR1 positive individuals can be as low as 100 ug/kg. Take note that the incredibly low dose used for heartworm prevention is well below the toxic dose even for even the most sensitive dogs. Before using higher doses of ivermectin, however, at risk dogs can be tested for the MDR1 gene mutation. This is especially important for breeds like Collies, Shetland Sheepdogs (Shelties), Australian Shepherds, Old English Sheepdogs, English Shepherds, German Shepherds, Long-haired Whippets, Silken Windhounds, and mutts that might be derived from these breeds.

Animals can absorb ivermectin through oral or topical exposures as well as via injection. Symptoms arise when the drug is present in the body at high enough concentrations that it crosses the blood-brain barrier and adversely affects neurologic function. Typical signs include:

 

  • dilated pupils

  • unsteadiness when walking

  • mental dullness

  • drooling

  • vomiting

  • blindness

  • tremors

  • seizures

  • coma

 

Treatment for an overdose of ivermectin is essentially symptomatic and supportive. If the poisoning is caught early enough, decontamination is helpful (e.g., washing pets after topical exposure or inducing vomiting and/or activated charcoal administration within a few hours of ingestion). Intravenous fluid therapy, endotracheal intubation, mechanical ventilation, extensive nursing care, seizure control, application of eye lubricants if the patient cannot blink, and nutritional support may all also be necessary. In some cases, intravenous lipid emulsion therapy, which is a new but promising option for certain types of poisoning, might be worth considering.

A pet’s prognosis can be quite good if aggressive treatment is initiated in a timely manner, but because severe cases of ivermectin overdose often require several weeks of therapy, the expense is often prohibitive …  as was the unfortunate case with my clients who chose to euthanize the last puppy in what had been their much anticipated litter.

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Image: Ruby Baby in Grass by carterse / via Flickr

 

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COMMENTS (8)
1
Who Wudda Thunk?
by TheOldBroad on 01/08/2013 06:19am

How terribly sad. Who would have thought puppies would eat horse manure!

I'd be curious about the circumstances. How old were the puppies and how is it they had access to the horse manure?

Is eating horse manure something that owners should be careful?

2
manure eating in dogs
by bdalzell on 01/08/2013 10:31am

Actually dogs and other canids are quite attracted to faeces, especially from herbivores.

Here is an extensive discussion:

http://behavior.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/local-assets/pdfs/Coprophagy_in_dogs.pdf

3
Connection to Allergies?
by CP on 01/08/2013 12:02pm

Is there any connection between ivermectin and allergy development? I adopted an 11 lb poodle mix a year ago from a local shelter. He's developed food allergies which he didn't have when he was adopted. He's been taking a combo heartworm/flea preventative pill for months.

by Dr. Jennifer Coates on 01/08/2013 02:02pm

No, there's no connection that I'm aware of.

4
Manure
by HawaiiHorses on 01/08/2013 03:00pm

I have 2 QH mares and 2 standard donks. Both my flat coat and pitX love to eat the poop. I have been aware of this potential issue for sometime. My equines are wormed 2x a year and I am very careful (as much as possible) to pick up poop asap during this time. My dogs do not carry the genes mentioned above. No problems so far other than breath that can drop a horse after they have dined on said poop.

5
Dog stools a concern?
by Chardo on 01/08/2013 11:51pm

I have four 13-pound dogs on Heartguard. One of them likes to eat the other's stools. I try to pick up, but she is fast, and I sometimes miss stools, too. Is this a concern for Ivermectin exposure given the low dose used for heartworm prevention? Thanks in advance for your reply.

by Dr. Jennifer Coates on 01/09/2013 01:25pm

No, this wouldn't be a problem (re. the ivermectin, at least), because the dose is so low.

6
2 dogs died less than 1yr
by Leigh Schinaia on 05/04/2013 01:41pm

Hi,

I stumbled on this article because I lost two dogs to heartworm. Or rather illness related to the treatment of Ivermectin for heartworms. The first dog was treated seasonally and contracted heartworms, and was tested three times by 3 diff vets who all said she had heartworm. She was a very lively dog, but getting older. We treated her with high doses of Ivermectin, and after treatment she lost weight, her hair was dull, and she was not herself. We assumed it was her old age. Then took her in for a check up, they found she had after only a few months after "treatment" she had Lymphoma. Whether or not these correlated or were a bad outcome is yet to know. She died less then a yr after being diagnosed and "treated" for this HW disease. But the fun doesn't stop there.

We gave our dogs all around HW pills and then our Beagle became infected. We treated him with the same vet, and treatment and less then a month later he died of kidney failure. Now you be the judge whether two normal dogs after treatment quickly went down hill from HW+ treatment or the Comfortis they only took once that year (which also can cause organ failure apparently) or we have the worst luck in the world. But HW disease may not be that bad, but the cure is even worse.

BTW both my dogs were on HeartGard and still got HW, we got new stuff from the vet yesterday that I researched called Trifexis and apparently it's euthanasia in a pill killing thousands of dogs the exact same way. TG we didn't give it yet..ever!, but it forces us back to HeartGard, and playing russian roulette with getting HW disease again.

I can say I don't know whether any of this works, but HW is not seasonal. At least try giving it to them all year. Mosquitos are around when we think they aren't. Think long and hard about the agressive HW+ treatment though. It kills.

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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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