HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Your cart
Cart is empty

|
 
Advanced Search
Beds & Bedding
Doggie Dining
Apparel & Accessories
Travel & Transport
Grooming
Indoor & Outdoor
Featured



DISCOUNT CLUB
Your Name:
Email Address:

Articles

Hookworms Can Be Deadly To Your Dog

Thursday, December 21, 2006 | Printer Friendly Printer Friendly


Hookworms are very little bloodsucking worms that can grow to about ¼ “inch in size.  They are named hookworm due to the fact that one end of its body is bent in the shape of a hook.

What a hookworm dose is it attach themselves to the intestinal lining by means of structures that are equivalent to teeth.  These teeth hold the hookworms in place and allow them to feed off the dog’s body while causing severe damage to the walls of the intestines. 

Hookworms continue the blood flow by secreting a substance that inhibits coagulation.  The severe blood loss to your dog can cause life threatening anemia and hemorrhaging if the hookworms continue to stay for a long period of time.

Adult hookworm lays its eggs in your dog’s stomach and intestines.  The eggs of the hookworm are passed out in the dog’s feces and then hatch outside in about a week  When dogs swallow the infected feces, that larvae make it’s way to the intestine where they hatch into hookworms after a few weeks.

The larvae are also capable of penetrating the skin, usually through the area of the feet and eventually find their way to the stomach.  Once the hookworms get inside the skin, they travel through the bloodstream and into the lungs, where they dig through the alveoli walls.  The hookworms are then expelled through coughing and then get swallowed once again, therefore ending up in the stomach.

A mother dogs can transmit these hookworms to her puppies through nursing.  This infection from hookworm can even start in the womb even before the puppies are born.  Typical symptoms of hookworms disease are diarrhea, bloody stool, anemia, weakness, emaciation, and skin that looks red and swollen. 

To treat hookworms, it is vital to take your dog to the vet right away.  The first step in curing hookworms is for your vet to kill them by means of tablets or injections.  After killing all hookworms, your vet will then treat your dog from malnutrition or anemia.  These conditions are usually related to hookworms and should need to be treated as well.

The vet will probably recommend regular appointments to check for further infestation.  You will also have to treat the soil in your yard in case that is the source of hookworms.  Your vet should be able to suggest certain products that are suitable for your type of weather.

Whenever your dog roams around or defecates on your property, make sure all waste products are removed.  This will help in preventing hookworm infestation.





<< 7 Ways To Keep Ticks Away From Your Dog. >>
 
AS SEEN ON..
featured in “Stump the Rach” segment, September 2007
12/22/08 issue, feature titled “Pamper Your Pooch”, page 22
March 2009 Issue, Small Business Edition, article titled “Lap of Luxury”, pages 89-90
Spring 2009 Issue, pictorial titled “Sleepless In Seattle”, inside back cover


GUARANTEES


Copyright © 2005-2010 Oh My Dog Supplies, LLC Printable version