Did you know? 15 percent of plant potting soil contains hookworm or roundworm eggs, or both, according to a study in the Veterinary Record (Feb. 18, 2006). Cats can also get tapeworms from eating infected fleas. Adult fleas can be infected with the tapeworm cyst and when ingested and then digested, the cyst matures into the adult tapeworm and attaches to the gut. Once mature, the segments break loose and pass in the stooL which is usually what you can see in the stool. A piece of “dried rice” found in the hairs around the anal area is usually a dried tapeworm segment and another sign of infection.
Clients sometimes report that their wife, aunt, neighbour or even their physician told them that their kids got pinworms from the dog. There’s no way this happened because dogs don’t get pinworms. Humans get highly contagious pinworms from other humans. Pet rabbits or horses can be infected with pinworms, but even those pinworms are species specific.
Veterinarians frequently hear, “I don’t see any worms in my pet’s stool so (a) my pet does not have worms and (b) my pet doesn’t need to be checked for worms.” Those of use in the veterinary profession know nothing could be farther from the truth. Eleven percent of all stool samples sent away for fecal analysis to an outside lab at our hospital came back as positive for an intestinal parasite and the stool looked completely normal. Thus, the importance of an annual fecal exam and regular deworming.
Pet parents have claimed that their cat, dog or even their bird has bedbugs, head lice or crab lice. Clients have a better chance of winning the lottery before that would happen! Bedbugs are an environmental problem and are extremely unlikely to infect a dog or cat. For head lice or crab lice, transmission is strictly human to human.
Cockroaches are a source of parasites for cats and indoor dogs. Physaloptera spp. (the stomach worm) comes from ingesting the roach- gross! Roundworm eggs can be found on the surface of the roach where they are ingested while pets play with the roach or eat it. Some research also indicates that feline asthma may be associated with cockroach debris.
Written by Dr. Shelagh Cantley DVM
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