Fighting Fleas and Ticks
My-Dog.info > Dog Diseases, Bites, Worms & Ticks
Back from vacationing at the beach, Fido and Kitty sniff out
familiar haunts around the yard. Meanwhile, their owner, Mary,
plops down on the family room carpet with a month's mail.
Mary scratches an ankle, then the other one, then a leg. Then
she looks down and sees why she's scratching: Fleas!
Although Fido and Kitty are flea-free after dog and cat
pesticide dips at the beach, the house is not.
During the weeks before vacation, fleas feeding and breeding
on the pets deposited unborn offspring all over the homestead.
And during the vacation, fleas at various life stages evolved,
nourished by dried-blood flea excrement, "flea dirt,"
in the carpet and elsewhere. The result: A population explosion
of fleas ravenous for fresh blood.
The scenario is fictional. But it depicts this fact: Left
uncontrolled, bloodsucking pests can infest not just your cat or
dog, but your entire house--and you!
Common household fleas don't usually transmit diseases to pets
and people. The tiny insects are mainly "just a
nuisance," says Marcia Larkins, D.V.M., chief of the
companion and wildlife drugs branch in the Food and Drug
Administration's Center for Veterinary Medicine. "They
generally cause a lot of itching and scratching. They may also
cause some discomfort due to possible allergic flea bite
dermatitis."
Ticks, those other dreaded bloodsuckers, pose greater risk,
annually giving pets and thousands of people illnesses such as
Lyme disease.
Fortunately, a wide array of pest control products for pets
are available: foggers, sprays, dips, powders, dusts, collars,
oral liquids and tablets, and even a liquid one-spot topical
treatment. There are new oral products that interrupt the flea's
life cycle, a Lyme disease vaccine for dogs, and a pesticide
product that mimics mouse nesting material to reduce ticks
outdoors.
FDA shares regulation of these products with the Environmental
Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. If a
pest-control product for pets is given by mouth, injected, or
absorbed through the skin, FDA regulates it. Otherwise, EPA does.
USDA licenses products that treat or prevent animal illness
caused by pests. States sometimes add licensing requirements.
American Fleas
While there are more than 200 species of fleas in this
country, the main troublemaker for pets is the cat flea. Happy to
feed on anyone in the household--cat, dog or human--these
wingless insects will most likely choose a pet, whose fur
provides warm camouflage for their breeding ground.
The flea life cycle has four stages: eggs, larvae, pupae, and
adults. Female fleas lay as many as 50 eggs a day, starting a
life cycle that can be completed in as little as three weeks,
depending on temperature and humidity. The eggs hatch into
larvae, which feed on "flea dirt," excrement of
partially digested blood. Larvae grow and molt twice, then spin
cocoons, where they grow to pupae and then adults. The adult
remains in the cocoon until vibrations indicate a host is nearby.
This waiting can extend the life cycle. It also explains why
large numbers of fleas often are seen when an empty building is
reoccupied. Six-legged adults emerge and attach to a host to feed
and breed, beginnning the cycle all over again.
Even when fleas elude detection on a pet, their black
poppyseed-like excrement gives them away.
The main problem with fleas--itching--is due not only to their
bites, but also to their crawling over the skin.
Other flea bite problems and their symptoms include:
- anemia in young, older or ill pets--pale gums, weakness,
lethargy
- transmission of tapeworm to pets--irritability, erratic
appetite, shaggy coat, mild diarrhea, weight loss,
seizures
- transmission by rodent fleas of plague to cats--fever,
swollen lymph nodes, mouth sores, swollen tongue, cough,
pneumonia.
Also, some pets are extremely allergic to flea bites. In these
pets, fleas may cause a rash, inflammation, and hair loss. In
response, cats may compulsively overgroom.
Preparations made from antigens extracted from fleas may help,
says David Espeseth, D.V.M., deputy director of USDA's Division
of Veterinary Biologics. USDA has licensed several.
"If a pet shows a reaction in a skin test," Espeseth
says, "that antigen may be effective in treating the animal
against that sensitivity. When allergic animals don't react in
the skin, this may mean you don't have the right antigen."
FDA has approved new types of prescription flea-control
products:
- Proban (cythioate), first oral insecticide for dogs--A
liquid or tablet, Proban is given once every three days
or twice a week. Several weeks' treatment may be needed
if fleas reinfest the dog.
- Pro-Spot (fenthion), first topically absorbed insecticide
for dogs--A liquid, Pro-Spot is applied to one spot
between the dog's shoulder blades no more than once every
two weeks. Treatment length depends on the rate of flea
infestation.
- Program (lufenuron), first oral insect growth regulator
(IGR) for dogs--A tablet, Program is given once a month
with a full meal. The IGR interrupts the flea life cycle:
Upon biting the pet, the female flea ingests the IGR,
which deposits in her eggs to stop them from developing.
- Program (lufenuron suspension), first oral IGR for
cats--A liquid, Program is given once a month, mixed with
food. Cats must be at least 6 weeks old.
Washing the pet's bedding regularly and vacuuming frequently
also helps keep the flea population down. The vacuum bag should
be changed after vacuuming and the used one burned, if possible,
to prevent it from serving as a flea incubator. Cats who don't go
outside have the least risk of getting fleas.
Tenacious Ticks
A tick has a one-piece body. The harpoon-like barbs of its
mouth attach to a host for feeding. Crablike legs and a sticky
secretion help hold the tick to the host. When attempting to
remove a tick, to prevent the mouth part from coming off and
remaining embedded in the skin, grasp the mouth close to the skin
with tweezers and pull gently.
Ticks are not insects like fleas, but arachnids like mites,
spiders and scorpions. They have a four-stage life cycle: eggs,
larvae, nymphs, and adults. Adult females of some species lay
about 100 eggs at a time. Others lay 3,000 to 6,000 eggs per
batch. Six-legged larvae hatch from the eggs. After at least one
blood meal, the larvae molt into eight-legged nymphs--in some
species, more than once. Final nymphs molt into adult males or
females, also with eight legs. Depending on its species, a tick
may take less than a year or up to several years to go through
its four-stage life cycle. While ticks need a blood meal at each
stage after hatching, some species can survive years without
feeding.
The United States has about 200 tick species. Habitats include
woods, beach grass, lawns, forests, and even urban areas.
Ticks may carry various infectious organisms that can transmit
diseases to cats and dogs, including the following (listed with
possible symptoms):
- babesiosis--lethargy, appetite loss, weakness, pale gums
- ehrlichiosis--high fever, muscle aches
- Lyme disease--lameness, swollen joints, fever, poor
appetite, fatigue, and vomiting (some infected animals
show no symptoms)
- tick paralysis in dogs--gradual paralysis, seen first as
an unsteady gait from uncoordinated back legs (some
infected dogs don't develop paralysis).
In June 1992, USDA licensed a vaccine to prevent Lyme disease
in dogs. This followed a conditional license in 1990.
According to USDA's Espeseth, "There were early concerns
about disease related to abnormal immune responses. But we've
never seen this. Nor have we seen such responses with extensive
safety testing prior to the final licensing."
In most cases, immunity lasts at least five or six months,
Espeseth says. "The recommendations are for dogs actively in
the field, subject to exposure. For dogs in apartments or those
that very seldom get out or reside in regions where Lyme disease
isn't prevalent, it's probably not worthwhile."
To reduce the population of deer ticks, which transmit Lyme
and other diseases and often attach to the deer mouse, EPA has
licensed a product named Damminix. It consists of tubes stuffed
with cotton balls treated with the pesticide permethrin.
"The cotton balls mimic the nesting material for the deer
mouse," says George La Rocca, a product manager in EPA's
Office of Pesticide Programs. The label, he says, directs users
to place the tubes containing the cotton balls in outdoor areas
inhabited by mice, such as brush-covered and wooded areas.
"It kills and repels ticks on the mice. It's not meant to
eradicate Lyme disease, but to reduce its incidence."
Debugging
To protect pets from the discomfort and illness caused by
fleas and ticks, it's important to rid the pets of the pests.
It's also important to treat a pet's environment to prevent or
reduce the incidence of reinfestation, says FDA's Larkins.
Products to control these pests are not risk-free, however.
Approved or registered products must warn users about the risks
the product poses and give directions for safest use. Proban's
label, for example, warns that the product is not for use in
greyhounds, who are sensitive to the insecticide it contains, an
organic phosphate. Also, some products should not be used
together or when a pet is taking certain medicines.
Larkins advises, "Follow directions for use very
carefully, even with over-the-counter products. If you don't
understand the directions or have questions, talk to your
veterinarian."
EPA product manager Rick Keigwin agrees. As pesticides are
intended to kill pests, they generally are inherently toxic, he
says. "Some products pose some risks, but they also offer
significant benefits. We balance the risks with the
benefits."
La Rocca adds that with cats, use only products labeled for
cats. "Cats are more sensitive than dogs in general,"
he says. "It also has to do with their size--just like
children are more sensitive than adults--and their grooming
habits. Dogs groom, but cats groom more, so they would ingest
more of a topical product."
Virtually hundreds of pesticides and repellents are approved
or licensed to control fleas and ticks on cats and dogs or in
their environment.
To select proper products for your pet's individual needs,
talk to your veterinarian, says Larkins. "It's a personal
choice between you and your veterinarian about the best product
to use and how to treat the animal, as well as the
environment."
Dixie Farley is a staff writer for FDA Consumer.
Improving Safety
Pesticides and repellents to protect cats and dogs from fleas
and ticks have risks as well as benefits. Concerned over recent
reports of adverse effects from such products, the Environmental
Protection Agency, in cooperation with industry, has developed
guidance for labeling changes to promote proper use.
The effort, coordinated by EPA policy analyst Janet
Whitehurst, began early in 1994, when she learned that in just 18
months, EPA had received 853 reports of adverse effects,
including 148 animal deaths and 58 reports of illness in humans.
Most reports involved cats, which are more sensitive than dogs.
Improved labels would:
- Direct users to read the entire label before each use.
- Clearly state the animal for which the product is
registered and the minimum age for safe use.
- Caution users to consult a veterinarian before treating
certain animals, such as those that are ill or pregnant
(unless safety is known).
- Warn about adverse reactions and interactions with
medicines or other chemicals.
- Advise users to wash their hands after use.
- Clearly state limitations for reapplication.
- Give a phone number to call about proper use and
emergencies.
- Include first-aid information.
Using Flea and Tick Products
- Read the entire label before use. If you don't understand
something, ask your veterinarian.
- Follow directions exactly, using latex gloves if
possible. Then wash your hands.
- On cats, use only products labeled for cats.
- Store products away from food and out of children's
reach.
For information on flea and tick treatments, visit the Dog/Pet Medications page.
Preventing Tick-Borne Disease
If your dog is outside regularly, ask the veterinarian about
the Lyme disease vaccine. (There's no vaccine for cats yet.)
Watch for itching, pain, appetite loss, lethargy, fever, swollen
joints, or lameness. If you suspect a tick-borne disease, see the
veterinarian pronto. With early diagnosis, antibiotics generally
work.
The illustration at right shows proper tick removal
procedures. Using fine-point tweezers, grasp the tick as close to
the skin as possible and pull gently. Make sure you've cleaned
your hands, the bite site, and the tweezers with disinfectant.
You may want to wear latex gloves.
The Lyme Disease Foundation, Hartford, Conn., suggests:
- Apply tick-killing pesticides to your pets.
- Treat your pet's environment with tick-killing
pesticides.
- Mow grass regularly.
- Avoid allowing your pet in grassy, wooded or beach areas,
unless you take appropriate precautions. While in areas
of tick exposure, examine pets closely for ticks on a
daily basis, especially around the head and inside the
ears.
- Remove ticks immediately. This is important because it
can take hours for an infected tick to transmit disease.
Using fine-point tweezers, grasp the tick where the mouth
parts are embedded into the skin and pull gently. Make
sure you've cleaned your hands, the bite site, and the
tweezers with disinfectant. You may want to wear latex
gloves.
- Place the tick in a small container, like a pill vial.
Label the container with the date, pet's name, type of
animal, and your name, address, and phone number. Call
your veterinarian about having the tick analyzed for type
and possible diseases it may transmit.
- Never remove a tick with your fingers, as the squeezing
further injects infectious material.
- Never try to burn a tick off or to smother it with
petroleum jelly or nail polish, as these methods don't
work.
In addition, take these steps to protect yourself when in
woods and grasslands:
- Wear long-sleeved shirts tight at the wrists, long pants
tight at the ankles and tucked in socks, and shoes
covering the whole foot.
- Wear light-colored clothes that show ticks easily.
- On clothing, use a repellent containing permethrin.
However, do not apply it to clothing while it is being
worn, and allow the clothing to thoroughly dry before
wearing.
- On skin, use a repellent containing DEET. But don't
overdo it. Too much bug spray can cause breathing
difficulty, especially in children.
Human Problems
Fleas and ticks transmit diseases to people as well as pets.
Lyme disease is by far the most often reported tick-borne
disease in humans in the United States: 13,083 cases in 1994, up
from 8,257 in 1993. Most reports came from the Northeast and
North Central regions of the country. Symptoms include fatigue,
chills and fever, headache, muscle and joint pain, swollen lymph
nodes, and a red, circular skin rash. (See "Getting Lyme
Disease to Take a Hike," in the June 1994 FDA Consumer.)
The next most prevalent disease from ticks is Rocky Mountain
spotted fever, characterized by fever, headache, rash, and nausea
or vomiting. It affects more than 500 people each year, according
to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
CDC received reports of 415 cases of human monocytotropic
ehrlichiosis, a disease also transmitted by ticks, since it was
identified in 1986. It is similar to Rocky Mountain spotted
fever, but usually without the rash. In 1994, scientists
identified another similar disease, human granulocytic
ehrlichiosis, or HGE. About 170 cases have been reported.
The organism that causes the tick-borne disease babesiosis
infects red blood cells, which burst and die, resulting in
hemolytic anemia. Patients develop a malaria-like fever, chills,
sweats, muscle aches, nausea, and vomiting; those with no spleen
are at particular risk of developing severe disease. The reported
incidence of babesiosis is about one-tenth that of Lyme disease,
or even less, according to Sam Telford, Ph.D., a lecturer on
tropical public health with the Harvard School of Public Health.
Lyme disease, HGE, and babesiosis are all transmitted by the
deer tick. Ticks have been found to have any two of those
disease-causing organisms. "I believe it's only a matter of
time before we find a tick with all three," Telford says.
The lone star tick transmits human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis.
Many exposed people never develop the diseases. Roughly 5
percent of the coastal Massachusetts' population has antibodies
against babesiosis, Telford says. "We believe it's about the
same for ehrlichiosis. For Lyme disease, it's maybe three times
that."
Fleas or an infected animal can transmit bubonic plague. Seven
cases, including one death, were reported to CDC in 1995, in
Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Oregon. Another 13 cases,
also including one death, were reported in 1994, in Arizona,
California, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah.
Symptoms of bubonic plague include fever, headache, vague
discomfort, and very painful, swollen lymph nodes near the
infection site. Septicemic plague is more serious because the
bloodstream is infected, as is pneumonic plague, with its
overwhelming pneumonia. Antibiotics are used for treatment. A
plague vaccine is available for special groups at very high risk.
Early diagnosis and treatment give humans the best chance of
recovery from these and other flea- or tick-transmitted diseases.
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