Secrets to Great Dog Health Care: External Parasites and Their Treatments

What is a parasite?

Other parasites are very common in dogs. Parasite is an organism that lives off the resources your dog has to offer: namely, drinking fresh blood (most of the parasites), and a warm place to stay (and their skin and fur).

What are the most common parasites that affect my dog be?

There are several kinds of parasites that affect dogs:

- Fleas – Ticks – mites – Lice

All of these parasites can cause side effects in your dog: typically, itching and inflammation of the skin, dull hair and bald patches. Advanced cases, dogs can develop their anemia (blood loss) and are generally weak (especially when he is very young, very old or suffering from another condition).

Also, there are numerous other parasites and internal parasites of your dog – may cause, for example, fleas usually the common tapeworm (which causes constipation and flatulence) and tick the number of serious problems like Lyme’s disease and paralysis.

I look at fleas: what they are, as you say, if your dog is affected and how to get rid of them.

Closer to the fleas

Fleas are undoubtedly at the number one most common external parasites in dogs. They are small, jumping insects that are light brown, even though people usually do not – they can move too quickly for that!

Fleas live in the blood of your dog. The life cycle of the flea moves very rapidly the first stage (egg) to four (adult flea stage), which means that they will multiply and incredible speed.

Hundreds of eggs a day for an adult flea. Each egg is then an adult flea, which determines their eggs, and hundreds more have become his. Flea is a big problem very quickly!

How to tell if your dog has fleas

Symptoms of flea infestation are unmistakable.

Dog flea infestation will scratch almost constantly, often in areas that contribute to fleas: the ears, the underside of the tail, belly and knees (looks like a soft leather strap, between the thigh and abdomen).

This is actually the saliva of the flea, causing irritation, and some dogs do not bite itself is a true allergy to the saliva (as opposed to the standard contrast irritation). Dogs with allergies suffer much negative reaction to a major infestation, and usually develop “hot spots”.

These hot areas of sore, inflamed, scaly, bleeding and infected skin caused by flea saliva and your dog’s own reaction to it. Bald patches sometimes develop inflammation of the ongoing and repeated scratching.

If you think your dog has fleas, you can have your doubts about having your skin: it will probably not see the fleas themselves can be confirmed, but you should be able to see what looks like, such as pepper (a thin pinch of fine black grains) of his skin. It is flea dirt (feces).

If you flea comb to groom him (which, like the magnifying glass), wipe it off the paper, which show: If the red blotches, except for towel, you know that your dog has fleas (on a white background, such as paper, flea poop in the red: since fleas feed on blood, their poop is appropriate) painted.

TREATMENT for fleas

Because fleas only a small amount of time actually spent by your dog, and the rest of their time leaping through your house with eggs and feeding of human blood, it is not enough to just treat the dog: you need to litter, the target for the whole house, all human bedding and yard ( Yes, the fleas lay eggs all through the yard. Even if it’s cold outside, you’re not off the hook: cold weather does not kill flea eggs, get it straight That state of hibernation. eggs hatch as soon as there is warm enough.)

You need a broad-spectrum treatment that is not only adult fleas (which kills those who bite), but also for all developing countries, fleas and eggs.

Prevention is the best (and easiest!)

Prevention is certainly the best treatment – you should get familiar with your dog flea treatment using a calendar to keep and use the treatments that are intended for a veterinarian. Off-the-shelf therapy is not recommended, since different dogs of different strengths depending on their size, age and activity. Especially useful for Flea treatment, most are designed to prevent other parasites (eg mites, ticks and heartworm) does not affect your dog.

The existing infection

If your dog already has fleas, you have two options:

1st You can “bomb” the house and yard with a flea-pesticide. These come as foggers (which coat each room and the courtyard is a fine mist of pesticide) and sprays (which are used by hand for each surface throughout the house and yard), and although they are very effective in killing fleas and eggs were not a major detriment: they are highly toxic to humans dogs, and the environment. Depending on your priorities, this is probably the quickest solution to the problem of fleas (and effectively destroy eggs, too), but if someone allergic to a house, or health status – including the pets! – Do you think maybe sometime.

2nd More health-friendly option is to encourage the dog for the current anti-flea solution to the animal doctor (such as Advantage or Revolution), and regularly cleaned up in accordance with the flea problem has gone. This means that each room thoroughly each day to suck – Put a flea collar, the fleas do not get absorbed into the vacuum bag – to kill all the people and dogs and wash their bedding in hot water as often as you can (once daily or every two days is recommended). You will be able to tell if the problem is gone because your dog does not scratch, and his skin is clear flea dirt when you inspect it for.

What you do not have fleas

- Do not use more than one product for your dog – it made him sick, because you are overloading your system of toxins. – Do not forget to treat the animals at the house at once: cat and dog fleas are interchangeable, and if an animal has fleas, they all are, even if some do not show symptoms. – Flea collars are not recommended as a safe alternative flea prevention, since the edges are highly toxic – vets have realized that this is a toxic material directly against your pet to the skin for a long period of time (flea collars must be entered in 24 / 7 shall be effective) is harmful your dog.

For more information about parasites and their treatment. . .

Fleas are just one of many different parasites that affect your dog. For more information about the complete prevention and treatment of all types of parasites (external and internal), as well as a comprehensive guide to all aspects of dog health, in view of the Ultimate Guide to Dog Health.

This book is an invaluable resource for responsible dog owners and help ensure that your dog is happy and healthy – you decide that he (or she) must be!


Article Resource: Insurance Articles

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