Flea Control With Cats and
Dogs
by:
Mark Smith
Fleas are the most common external parasite
of pets in North America. Fleas are small
wingless insects that use their specialized
mouth to pierce the skin and siphon blood from
their host. When a flea bites, it injects a
small amount of saliva into the skin to
prevent the blood from coagulating. Some
animals become sensitized to flea saliva and
animals that are allergic can have severe
itching and scratching from a single bite.
Flea allergy dermatitis is the most common
disease among dogs.
Current flea control products are primarily
either oral or topical systemic treatments.
Most of the products may be used for
prevention as well as to treat existing flea
problems. One group of products control fleas
by interrupting their development by killing
or stopping the maturation of flea larvae and
eggs. These drugs are called Insect Growth
Regulators (IGRs). One common oral product
used is lufenuron which is found in the
Program® line of products which are
administered orally in tablet or liquid form.
Methoprene and pyriproxifen are also IGRs that
are available as sprays or collars. The FDA
shares regulation of these products with the
Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. Because even the
same products from other countries have not
been approved by these agencies, it is illegal
to purchase or import these products for use
in the United States.
Currently the most popular flea control
products kill adult fleas (adulticide), are
applied topically and work rapidly. Popular
topical products utilize fipronil which is the
key ingredient in Frontline® Top Spot and
imidacloprid which is in Advantage®. The most
popular product on the market, Frontline
Plus®, utilizes both an adulticide and an IGR.
An oral adulticide that is also available is
nitenpyram which is in Capstar® and begins to
kill fleas in 30 minutes. Frontline Plus also
kills ticks which makes it the most popular
product where ongoing tick protection is
required.
Consult with your veterinarian to determine
which flea and tick control products are best
for you. The choice of flea control will
depend on your climate, environment, your
pet's activities, and potential for exposure.
However, with consistent use, it is almost
always possible to control your flea problem.
Using these products throughout the year
typically will eliminate the need for regular
insecticidal use. The following provide
additional summary information on selected
popular products.
Program from Novartis®
Program is available as a once a month pill
or oral liquid suspension to be given with a
full meal. Adult fleas that ingest Program's
key ingredient, lufenuron, produce sterile
eggs. Program does not kill adult fleas so
pets remain susceptible to fleas hatching and
maturing pupa already present in the
environment. Therefore, some time may pass
before the all fleas are killed in an
environment. In order to stop the life cycle,
every animal in the environment must receive
lufenuron. Pets should also be sprayed with an
adulticide during the first week or two of
starting Program.
Advantage from Bayer®
Advantage is applied topically on both dogs
and cats and seems to be very well-tolerated
by sensitive cats. Advantage kills fleas
within 24 hours and 100% protection can be
maintained for cats for 21 days and 90%
protection can be maintained for dogs for 28
days. Advantage is susceptible to washing off
so dogs that are active outdoors and dogs that
swim or must be bathed frequently should be
re-treated frequently. Up to weekly
re-treatment is allowed. The imidacloprid in
Advantage does not effect ticks, but
K-9Advantix, with permethrin does. K9 Advantix
is only labeled for once a month K9 Advantix
is ONLY FOR USE WITH DOGS and MUST NOT BE
ADMINISTERED TO CATS.
Frontline Spray, Frontline Plus And
Frontline Top Spot from Merial®
Frontline Spray, Frontline Plus, and
Frontline Top Spot comprise the market leading
Frontline flea control product line. The
fipronil in Frontline products is a broad
spectrum insecticide available as a spray or
topical. Fipronil works by binding chemically
to the pet's hair and is absorbed through the
follicle by the sebaceous glands. As a spray,
fipronil kills fleas at 95% for over 80 days
after application on dogs and for 1 month with
biweekly bathing. Frontline is labeled for
puppies and kittens as young as 8 weeks (10
weeks for Top Spot) and it is not washed off
by bathing. Frontline is also affective
against ticks. Some cats may show minor
adverse reactions with high volume use of the
alcohol based spray product which should be
applied no more than once a month. Frontline
Plus also contains the IGR, S-methoprene which
inhibits the growth of immature fleas.
Capstar from Novartis®
Capstar is an oral tablet for dogs and cats
that may be administered as young as 4 weeks
of age. It offers extremely rapid and complete
killing of adult fleas and is safe enough that
the tablets may be used whenever fleas are
seen on your pet as often as once per day.
Capstar may be used in combination with an IGR
to kill fleas immediately to compliment the
long-term control of an IGR such as Program.
About The Author
(c) VetDepot.com
Mark Smith is a staff writer for
http://www.VetDepot.com. Vet Depot
offers discount and wholesale brand name
pet medications for dogs, cats, horses,
and selected products for fish breeders.
All over-the-counter (OTC) pet medications
are manufactured for use in the United
States with FDA/EPA approval. Vet Depot
purchases from the same distributors that
supply your local veterinarians. All
products are Guaranteed fresh. |