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Scottiemom

Florida

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Joined: 09/09/2003

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Posted: 02/01/23 06:01am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Your border collies are amazing, Mark. Just beautiful how they are so focused. Glad you've got some LGD's to help them out.

Dale


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BCSnob

Middletown, MD

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Posted: 02/04/23 08:57am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Bummer.

When I got our new LGDs from a sheep farm in southeastern WV, the farmer said they do not use heartworm preventative (based upon their Vet’s recommendation). We took Duke and Penny in for a heath check. Both are healthy based upon the physical however Duke was heartworm positive on the snap test.

He goes back to the vet Monday for retesting to be sent out to a lab.

Deb and Ed M

SW MI & Space Coast, FL USA

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Posted: 02/05/23 08:41am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

I can't imagine not using a HW preventative on dogs who live outdoors....

BCSnob

Middletown, MD

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Posted: 02/09/23 06:40pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Positive test confirmed.
We’ll be starting the treatment asap.
Duke will not be working while undergoing treatment.
We’re making our game plan for dealing with young inexperienced Penny protecting the flock but not causing issues during lambing.

Scottiemom

Florida

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Posted: 02/10/23 05:16am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Sorry to hear about Duke, but so glad he is where he is getting proper treatment. Hopefully Penny will be able to step up and shoulder the responsibility until Duke rejoins the flock.

Dale

Scottiemom

Florida

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Posted: 03/02/23 09:37am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

BCSnob wrote:

Positive test confirmed.
We’ll be starting the treatment asap.
Duke will not be working while undergoing treatment.
We’re making our game plan for dealing with young inexperienced Penny protecting the flock but not causing issues during lambing.


It's been about a month. Any update on Duke? How goes the lambing?

Dale

BCSnob

Middletown, MD

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Posted: 03/02/23 10:20am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

The treatment protocol covers 1 year; ~6 months of restricted activity (ideally crated and leash walked). For a dog that has never lived in a house it is not possible to keep him calm while crated or even in the house at night (LGDs do most of their work at night). We’ve come up with a compromise plan (after consultation with Dr Doug and our friend who is a Vet). We will keep Duke in the house during the day to facilitate giving meds and monitoring his health during treatment; he will be locked in the barnyard with the sheep at night (limiting his desire and ability to patrol) and Penny (1 yo Anatolian) will be locked out of the barnyard at night to patrol the field (and not able to play with Duke). We have determined a dose of anti anxiety meds that will allow Duke to tolerate being housed at night during the critical times right after treatment with adulticide for the worms.

Since Penny is not old/mature enough to have gone through lambing she will be kept away from the lambs at night and will be pulling a drag (something to slow her down but not prevent her from patrolling) during the day while with the ewes and lambs in the field.

The first possible day for lambs is Friday Mar 3. Last week we found a ewe cast (upside down unable to get up) in the morning that we thought was dead. She had started to bloat from being cast. We managed to save her and since then have had 4 more ewes go down in health which we now believe is due to hypocalcemia (low calcium). The ewes go from looking weak, to unable to stand, to lying flat with labored breathing. SubQ injections of calcium gluconate restore them within 30min to where they can stand. One of the sick ewes did abort a set of twins; I found her in the field with the head of a dead lamb sticking out of her. We had to pull both lambs out of her because she wasn’t having strong enough contractions.

Added: I forgot about the ewe that prolapsed before all the issues with hypocalcemia; she died a few days after we put everything back inside her.

The hypocalcemia is likely the consequence of adding grain to their diet too late/slowly. Last year we started late and increased their rations too quickly leading to many having bloat and a few died from it.

Probably TMI, but you asked.

* This post was edited 03/02/23 12:27pm by BCSnob *

corgi-traveler

Bakersfield, CA

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Posted: 03/04/23 04:50pm Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Sorry to hear about Duke's diagnosis. Glad you were able to develop a plan quickly.
As for not having dogs on HW preventative, where we live it's quite common. I have to specifically ask for a HW test every year at the vet. All of our jokes about it being a dry heat aside, it is very dry and not really much risk of HW. My dogs are on a preventative because we travel with them, and going more than 50-ish miles from home can put us into a climate where the risk is present. If they were homebodies I wouldn't do it.


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dturm

Lake County, IN

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Posted: 03/06/23 05:45am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

When evaluating the risk of heartworm disease, it's important to use valid information. The following is a map compiled by the Heartworm Society.

The map is from 2019 (them most current available).

I've practiced in an endemic area where a dog would get heartworm if not on preventive medication. The only variable was when based on how long the animal was outside or exposed to mosquitoes.

The current heartworm preventative medications also treat/prevent most intestinal parasites as well. Because of the broad spectrum of benefits and the very low potential of side effects, my choice would be to administer preventative medications everywhere in the US.

Doug, DVM


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BCSnob

Middletown, MD

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Posted: 03/06/23 06:34am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

dturm wrote:

my choice would be to administer preventative medications everywhere in the US.

Doug, DVM
This would be my recommendation as well, especially compared to the treatment protocol if your dog gets heartworms. Also keep in mind an infected dog is now a reservoir of heartworms for local mosquitoes to draw from and inject into other local dogs. Part of the treatment protocol is the use of topical mosquito repellent.

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