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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.

 

Risks from Rodenticides are Changing: Part 1

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March 11, 2013 / (2) comments


I talked a couple of weeks back about how the addition of a bittering agent to all ethylene-glycol based antifreeze sold in the United States would hopefully help prevent pet poisonings. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently announced some changes to the rodenticide market that may (or may not) have a similar effect.

 

The rodenticides that veterinarians, myself included, have the most experience dealing with are anticoagulants. For example, short-acting warfarin or long-acting brodifacoum. After all, these baits are made to be appetizing to mice and rats, and dogs are not exactly known for their discriminating palates. Cats can also be affected, but I suspect more are exposed by eating poisoned mice than by eating the baits directly.

Anti-coagulant rodenticide poisonings can be very satisfying to treat. The classic symptoms are unexplained bleeding or bruising combined with lethargy and a poor appetite. When an otherwise healthy patient presents with these signs, rodenticide poisoning immediately comes to mind. The diagnosis is relatively straightforward, involving tests of the ability of the pet’s blood to form clots. These poisons act by inhibiting the regeneration of vitamin K in the body. Vitamin K is needed to make several factors that are essential to the clotting process, so without enough vitamin K blood clots cannot form, resulting in abnormal bleeding or bruising.

Obviously, bleeding can be a potentially serious problem, but since vitamin K reserves are gradually depleted, symptoms tend to develop over several days. If the pet is brought in for an examination early in the course of the disease, giving it vitamin K supplements until the poison is cleared from the body should be curative. Even better, when a dog is known to have been exposed, decontamination (e.g., inducing vomiting and administering activated charcoal) within a few hours of ingestion and vitamin K supplements can stop pets from ever developing symptoms. More advanced cases may require blood transfusions and other aggressive forms of treatment.

The EPA has spent the last few years trying to reduce the risk that rodenticides pose to pets, wildlife, and people (especially children). According to a January 30, 2013 press release regarding a ban on certain products:

 

The EPA requires rodenticide products for consumer use to be contained in protective tamper-resistant bait stations and prohibits pellets and other bait forms that cannot be secured in bait stations. In addition, the EPA prohibits the sale to residential consumers of products containing brodifacoum, bromadiolone, difethialone, and difenacoum because of their toxicity to wildlife.

 

The move away from brodifacoum and the mandate for tamper-resistant bait stations hopefully means that fewer pets will be poisoned, but it may also have the unintended consequence of exposing dogs and cats to an alternative rodenticide that is more difficult to diagnose and treat.

More on this tomorrow.

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Image: Composite; discpicture and NuDesign.co / via Shutterstock

 

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COMMENTS (2)
1
Is the replacement worse?
by dogaware on 03/11/2013 01:38pm

As welcome as this news is, a January DVM360 article indicated that the replacement rodenticide, bromethalin, may be even worse:

New rodenticide without antidote alarms pet toxicology experts
http://veterinarynews.dvm360.com/dvm/Toxicology/New-rodenticide-without-antidote-alarms-pet-toxico/ArticleStandard/Article/detail/804032

2
To The Vet Stat!
by TheOldBroad on 03/11/2013 06:13pm

"The classic symptoms are unexplained bleeding or bruising combined with lethargy and a poor appetite."

My biggest fear is the people that don't know that Fido or Fluffy ate poison (or a poisoned mouse). Bruising might be hard to detect with a fluffy critter and if Fldo or Fluffy is lethargic or eating poorly, so many people will have a "wait and see" attitude until the problem is really serious.

This would be another reason to (1) keep the cat indoors and/or (2) always accompany Fido when he/she goes outdoors.

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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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