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ABSTRACT OF THE WEEK

Today's Veterinary Practice
Volume 14 | Issue 2 (Mar-Apr 2024)

Top Tips for Managing Home and Kennel Infestations With Brown Dog Ticks

Today's Vet Pract. Mar-Apr 2024;14(2):30-37. 24 Refs
Sarah Myers1, Susan Little
1 Kansas State University, College of Veterinary Medicine, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA.

Author Abstract

Brown dog ticks are unusual among common tick species in their strong host preference for dogs and propensity to establish indoor infestations that can be difficult to eliminate.

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Archives Highlights:
Attitudes and Beliefs of a Sample of Australian Dog and Cat Owners towards Pet Confinement.
Dog owners showed the strongest support for confining dogs to the owners' property whenever unsupervised (98% agreement) and less support for confining dogs inside the house at night (54% agreement), and only 23% believed dogs had a negative impact on wildlife. Cat owners showed the strongest support for confining cats inside the house at night (89% agreement). Cat owners' non-supportive attitudes toward cat confinement were partly because of higher concern for cat quality of life and lower concern about their cats' predation behaviours, compared to non-cat owners.
Head Trauma Management in Small Animals
This article reviews the pathophysiology of head trauma, patient assessment, diagnostic testing, treatment recommendations, monitoring, and prognosis.
Top Tips for Managing Home and Kennel Infestations With Brown Dog Ticks
Thorough cleaning of the environment to remove tick biomass followed by premise treatment by an experienced exterminator can hasten elimination of ticks. Brown dog ticks are long-lived off the host and may continue to emerge from the structure for many months; a long-term approach is needed to eliminate the population.
Risk factors for unilateral cranial cruciate ligament rupture diagnosis and for clinical management in dogs under primary veterinary care in the UK.
After accounting for confounding factors, dogs aged 6 to less than 9 years, male neutered and female neutered dogs, insured dogs, and Rottweiler, Bichon Frise, and West Highland White terrier breeds, in particular, had increased odds of unilateral CCL rupture diagnosis. Insured dogs and dogs = 20 kg had increased odds of surgical management, while dogs = 9 years and dogs with one non-orthopaedic comorbidity at diagnosis with CCL rupture had reduced odds. These findings inform identification of at-risk dogs.
Approach to dealing with acute heart failure in cats and dogs
The general principles of heart failure management can be applied to a broad range of cardiac diseases; identifying a cardiac cause for the clinical signs is therefore more important than making a definitive diagnosis in the acute phase of heart failure. Nevertheless, there is no ‘one-size-fits-all’ recipe for treatment and the approach needs to be tailored to the individual.

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