My dog ​​was bitten by a tick, what should I do? Symptoms, first aid and treatment regimen

The first ticks in nature can be found as early as April. After hibernation, like all living beings, they need food - fresh blood of animals and people. Ticks are most active in the month of May. With the onset of the warm season, the number of diseases caused by tick bites in dogs increases sharply. With the onset of spring, dog owners begin to worry about how to protect their pet from this problem by any means. A tick bite in itself is not so terrible for a dog; dangerous pathogens are contained in the tick’s saliva, which can cause a number of dangerous and sometimes fatal diseases for a dog. Dogs walking through tall grass or dense bushes are especially at risk, where they are especially likely to pick up a tick. Therefore, when returning from a walk, it is necessary to carefully examine the dog’s fur. A tick that has just attached itself to a dog's skin is about the size of a pinhead. Over time, after he drinks blood, he grows to the size of a bean and is impossible not to notice.

General information about ticks . Ticks (Acarina) are small (0.1-30 mm) arthropods of the arachnid class (Arachnoidea) belonging to the largest group in the arthropod subclass, their number reaches 50 thousand species, most of which do not cause any harm to humans and animals. Ticks that parasitize dogs are usually classified as carnivorous parasites, leading to the development of allergies, dermatitis, bacterial and viral diseases

Some ticks that attack dogs drink blood, others chew the skin, and others feed on skin secretions and lymph. Dogs are most often parasitized by three types of ticks:

  • Ixodidae (Ixodidae) are the largest ticks, which in a hungry state reach 2-3 mm in length, and after sucking blood - up to 1-1.5 cm
  • Scabies (internal, ear).
  • Subcutaneous (demodectic).

The most dangerous to the life of dogs in the spring are considered to be ixodid ticks, which are carriers of dangerous blood-parasitic diseases (borreliosis, encephalitis and piroplasmosis).

Consequences

Ticks become active during the first spring warmings. In the south of Russia this is the end of February, in the middle zone and in the north - April-May. In the heat, the parasites lose activity, but with the first autumn rains they resume.


Ixodid tick

How dangerous is a tick bite for a dog?

Eggs require animal protein to mature. Ixodid ticks have adapted to obtain it from the blood of mammals. The parasites attach themselves to the animal’s skin and secrete painkillers so that the dog does not notice the presence of guests. To prevent blood clotting, the parasite secretes anticoagulants.

How long does a tick live on a dog? The parasite needs time to choose a secluded place, attach to the skin, make a puncture and suck on. Most often, the tick is attached to the folds of the skin or ears. The female is saturated with blood for 6 days and increases in size a hundred times. In total, the parasite can live on a pet for up to 10 days.

If a dog has a lot of ticks attached to it, anemia develops. The pet weakens, becomes defenseless against the permanent inhabitants of the skin - coccus bacteria, and develops dermatitis and abscesses. The main danger to animals and humans are sexually mature individuals, mainly females, who carry pathogens.


Ixodid ticks prefer secluded places

It is dangerous for the parasite to get inside. If a dog accidentally swallows a tick, it will dissolve and pathogens will enter the bloodstream.

What diseases can ticks transmit to dogs?

The following infectious diseases pose the greatest danger:

  1. Piroplasmosis (babesiosis). Caused by protozoan microorganisms that settle inside red blood cells.
  2. Bartonellosis is caused by motile bacteria that parasitize red blood cells.
  3. Borreliosis or Lyme disease is caused by spirochetes.
  4. Ehrlichiosis is caused by protozoan microorganisms.

Ixodid ticks are dangerous not only for dogs. In the steppe regions, through the bites of arthropods, people become infected with Crimean fever, and residents of the taiga become infected with tick-borne encephalitis.

Can a dog die?

If you find a tick on your dog, don't panic. Not every parasite is infected. In addition, the arthropod needs time for protozoan microbes or pathogenic bacteria to move from the intestines to the salivary glands.

However, if you missed the moment of tick attachment and find it already sucking blood, consult a doctor.

If the arthropod is infected with Babesia, the dog may die.

When infected with other pathogens, recovery is possible, but death cannot be ruled out after a long illness.


The tick sucked blood

The process of a tick attack on a dog

Hungry ticks find their prey thanks to the presence of special thermal sensors. A dog passing by a bush or grass on which a tick is sitting becomes an object of attack, the tick makes a jump and, clinging to the hair, remains on the dog. Having latched onto a dog, the tick begins to look for the place on the dog’s body that is least covered with hair (skin around the ears, neck, legs, abdominal area, etc.). Further digging into the skin with its tentacles, the tick pierces the skin and begins the process of sucking blood. It becomes almost impossible to tear it away from the dog at this time, and only after the tick has completely drunk blood does it fall off the dog’s skin.

Symptoms and signs


Babesia
1. The incubation period for piroplasmosis is from 1 to 3 weeks. Babesia settle in red blood cells and feed on their contents. When they have eaten everything, they move to the next cage.

The following forms of the disease are distinguished:

  1. Lightning fast, the animal dies suddenly without clinical symptoms.
  2. Manifest, characterized by the following signs: after a tick bite, the dog experiences convulsions;
  3. refusal to eat;
  4. yellowness of mucous membranes;
  5. temperature 42°C;
  6. tachycardia;
  7. dark brown urine;
  8. paralysis of the hind limbs.
  • In subacute and chronic forms of piroplasmosis, indigestion occurs, the animal loses weight and dies.
  • 2. Bartonellosis is characterized by a chronic course. Months after the bite, the following symptoms develop:

    • vomiting, diarrhea;
    • conjunctivitis;
    • myocarditis;
    • pathologies of the mucous membranes - rhinitis, stomatitis; gingivitis.

    3. Borreliosis develops 3-4 weeks after the bite. The disease is characterized by the following symptoms:

    • lameness, joint pain;
    • fever;
    • tachycardia;
    • paresis of limbs;
    • convulsions;
    • a characteristic symptom is ring-shaped redness after a bite or erythema migrans, which disappears and appears on another part of the body.

    4. Ehrlichiosis is characterized by inflammation of blood vessels - vasculitis. Clinical signs are as follows:

    • apathy;
    • hyperthermia - 41° C;
    • purulent rhinitis and conjunctivitis;
    • hemorrhages on mucous membranes and non-pigmented skin;
    • thrombocytopenia.

    Watch the video:

    Why don’t mongrels get piroplasmosis?

    Mongrels, just like purebred dogs, suffer from piroplasmosis. However, they can get it in a mild form and so often that the immune system is constantly waiting for an attack from piroplasms.

    IMPORTANT: In most mongrels, piroplasmosis is in a chronic form. At the slightest weakening of the dog’s health, the disease will immediately make itself felt.


    Mongrels often suffer from chronic piroplasmosis.
    Any owner can protect his dog, whether purebred or mongrel. To prevent infection, it is enough to thoroughly treat the dog before a walk and carefully examine it after.

    If an attached tick is found on the animal’s body, it is best to immediately contact a veterinarian without delay.

    What to do

    To save a dog after a bite, you need to provide first aid, remove the tick, place it in a bottle and take it to the clinic. There they will conduct a study to detect the DNA of pathogens and prescribe treatment.

    If the tick turns out to be free of contagion, observe the dog and remember that pathological symptoms may appear several months after the bite.

    First aid for a bite at home

    If you find a tick, it must be safely removed.

    Don’t panic, even if the arthropod is infected, it takes a day or more for the pathogens to reach the salivary glands of the parasite.

    However, one cannot be careless. There may be microorganisms inside the tick that can cause human illness. When crushed, protozoa or bacteria can enter the bloodstream through mucous membranes or skin pores. Therefore, wear gloves.

    The opinion that a tick can be killed by lubricating the spiracles with oil is unfounded. The arthropod can live without oxygen for more than a day. During this time, pathogens will enter the bloodstream. Applying an insecticide to the parasite does not always help. The tick will not die soon, but the dog will have time to become infected.

    Do not remove an attached parasite with tweezers.

    If limbs or the head remain in the wound after a bite, inflammation will develop.

    Use professional tick removers.

    I tried to pull out the tick with Anti-Tick tweezers. I did not like. The inflated parasite burst, blood sprayed out, it’s good that he dodged and didn’t get a jet in his eyes.


    Anti-mite

    Perhaps this is my subjective opinion. But Tik Twister delighted me. I turned the tick out the first time.


    Tick ​​Twister

    The device resembles a nail puller and costs about 160 rubles. Watch the video and rate.

    Recommended reading:

    How to remove a tick from a dog?

    If you removed the parasite carelessly, after the tick bite a lump may form that is dense and painless to the touch.

    Most often, the tumor does not cause harm and is an allergic response to the secretions left by the arthropod. Perhaps the affected area was itchy and the pet scratched it. But the red spot spoils the appearance and can remain at the site of the bite for up to six months.

    In any case, observe your pet for 15-20 days. If the dog's behavior has not changed, the mucous membranes have not turned pale or yellowed, it eats well, is active and cheerful, everything is fine.

    If a tick leg remains in the wound , the formation will gradually resolve. But when the head remains, there is a high probability of suppuration and the formation of an abscess. Do not fix the defect yourself. You may cause skin irritation that may result in eczema or another type of dermatitis that is difficult to treat. Visit a veterinary hospital and take the medicine prescribed by your doctor.

    When you find a dead tick on your dog , pay attention to its size. If it has sucked blood, then take the parasite to a hospital for examination to determine what contagions are inside it. If the arthropod is small, test anyway. You may have used acaricides that killed the parasite. Or the dog snapped his teeth and crushed the arthropod. But there is no guarantee that other ticks will also die. Therefore, it is better to know whether he is infected or not?

    I foresee questions about what to do when you are in the forest, at the dacha, there are no veterinary clinics around, and a tick has bitten your dog? Responsible dog breeders, before going into nature, go to a hospital so that the pet can be given an antiprotozoal drug, for example, Piro-Stop, for preventive purposes.

    The veterinary industry produces antiprotozoal drugs that are used to kill Babesia after a tick bite based on imidocarb or diminazene aceturate.

    Imidocarb derivatives - Piro-Stop, Forticarb, Babezan are produced in solution, are relatively harmless and high in cost (a 10 ml bottle of Piro-Stop - 524 rubles). After opening the container, the medicine must be developed within 28 days.

    Medicines based on diminazene aceturate - Azidine, Berenil, Veriben, Pirosan - are produced in powders that are dissolved before use. The drugs are effective and inexpensive (2.4 g of Azidine sells for 30 rubles), but have side effects.

    If you risk using the drugs yourself, there is a high probability that you will save the dog, but make it disabled. On the Internet you will definitely run into advice from amateurs like yourself. Therefore, contact your veterinarian by phone and follow his instructions.

    How to remove a tick from a dog's body?

    In order to remove a tick from a dog’s body, you must first drop vegetable oil, gasoline, alcohol onto the bite site and leave it on the skin for several minutes. After these procedures, the tick will fall off on its own or weaken its grip and we will remove it using tweezers. It is best to grab the tick with tweezers in the head area and begin to twist it so that the tick’s head does not remain in the dog’s body.

    Removal using thread. We tie the tick with a thread on both sides and, as in the previous case, begin to carefully and slowly unscrew it from the skin. After removing the tick, in order to prevent the spread of infection, the wound must be treated with a 5% iodine solution.

    Removing ticks using special shampoo. To do this, you will need to buy a drug at the pet store that kills tick larvae and weakens the effect of the tick itself. Any remaining ticks after washing will need to be removed manually. However, the dog owner should in no way think that after removing the tick from the dog’s body, the danger of its infection with one or another infectious disease has completely disappeared. Infectious diseases, depending on the type of infection, can occur in a dog after several days or months.

    Treatment

    The professional approach to the treatment of piroplasmosis in the Russian Federation and abroad is different.

    The European approach is to inject an imidocarb-based drug if symptoms of piroplasmosis occur. The dog is monitored for 2 weeks. If your pet is feeling good, there is no need to do anything. Otherwise, the injection is repeated. Imidocarb protects the dog from subsequent arthropod attacks.

    If the first injection coincides with darkening of the urine, an antimicrobial drug containing Doxycycline, Azithromycin or erythromycin is prescribed. Antibiotics destroy synergistic microflora. After completing the course, the dog is temporarily transferred to veterinary food with prebiotics to restore digestion.

    In Russia, a different treatment regimen has been adopted. Diminazene aceturate derivatives are mainly used. To maintain the function of the liver, kidneys, and heart, maintenance therapy is carried out through droppers. Antibiotics are widely used. Veterinarians practice additional injections of antiprotozoal drugs. The liver suffers. The situation is corrected with hepatoprotectors.

    I recommend using Hill's l/d high-calorie and low-protein veterinary nutrition for the treatment of liver pathologies to restore digestive functions.

    Despite the dissimilarity of symptoms and pathogens, the treatment regimen for bartonellosis, borreliosis and ehrlichiosis is approximately the same. In all situations, a course of antibiotic therapy with Doxycycline is used.

    If the causative agent of the disease is protozoan microorganisms, an injection of Imidocarb is given. General strengthening agents, hepatoprotectors, and B vitamins are used.

    To restore digestive functions, use Hill's l/d or Royal Canin Hepatic medicinal food.

    Prevention memo

    Prevention of tick attacks on dogs and the diseases they carry is as follows:

    1. Destruction of the parasite in the natural environment. You cannot eliminate ticks in forests and parks at your discretion, but you have the right to carry out decontamination in your personal garden or summer cottage. The drug Medilis-Ziper ensures the destruction of parasites and protection against the appearance of new ones for 1-1.5 months. 12 ml of concentrate is consumed per hundred square meters. The cost of 0.5 liters of pesticide is 1200 rubles. In addition to the above, the following acaricidal agents are in demand: Argus Garden;
    2. Dobrokhim FOS;
    3. Dr. Klaus;
    4. Ram.
  • Preventing your dog from coming into contact with arthropods. Avoid outdoor picnics during arthropod activity periods. Choose tick-free areas for walking.
  • Safe removal of attached ticks. Wear gloves. Use a Tick-Twister twister or similar professional tools.
  • Chemical protection products. Apply drops to the withers, flea collars. Carry aerosols with you that repel arthropods. Chemical agents do not guarantee 100% protection, but they reduce the risk of attack by ixodid ticks.
  • Acaricidal tablets - Bravecto, Sayfli, Frontline-Nexgard - give your pet 4 hours before going outside. The ticks die within half a day and do not have time to transmit the pathogen to the dog.
  • Before the onset of the arthropod activity season, I recommend visiting the clinic and getting an injection of the drug Piro-Stop or its analogue based on imidocarb. The medicine will not save you from a tick attack, but it will protect you from piroplasm.
  • Get vaccinated with Eurikan Piro vaccine. Due to the high cost (2,700 rubles, plus veterinarian services), the drug is not widely used in Russia.
  • Keep your pet in accordance with sanitary standards. Feed premium or higher grade prepared foods. Good nutrition increases the dog's resistance to invasion.
  • If you have any questions, I will answer in the comments.

    Next: Large dog breeds with photos and names

    Rating
    ( 1 rating, average 5 out of 5 )
    Did you like the article? Share with friends:
    For any suggestions regarding the site: [email protected]
    Для любых предложений по сайту: [email protected]