Cargando…

Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA

BACKGROUND: A study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA. Evaluations of on-animal and premises flea burdens, flea sex structure and fed-unfed premises flea populations were c...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dryden, Michael W., Smith, Vicki, Chwala, Monica, Jones, Emery, Crevoiserat, Lisa, McGrady, Jennifer C., Foley, Kaitlin M., Patton, Paula R., Hawkins, Anthony, Carithers, Doug
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4445572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26003175
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-015-0897-z
_version_ 1782373300082573312
author Dryden, Michael W.
Smith, Vicki
Chwala, Monica
Jones, Emery
Crevoiserat, Lisa
McGrady, Jennifer C.
Foley, Kaitlin M.
Patton, Paula R.
Hawkins, Anthony
Carithers, Doug
author_facet Dryden, Michael W.
Smith, Vicki
Chwala, Monica
Jones, Emery
Crevoiserat, Lisa
McGrady, Jennifer C.
Foley, Kaitlin M.
Patton, Paula R.
Hawkins, Anthony
Carithers, Doug
author_sort Dryden, Michael W.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA. Evaluations of on-animal and premises flea burdens, flea sex structure and fed-unfed premises flea populations were conducted to more accurately assess flea population dynamics in households. METHODS: Thirty seven naturally flea infested dogs in 23 homes in Tampa, FL were enrolled in the study and treated with afoxolaner chewables. Chewables (NexGard® Chewables; Merial) were administered according to label directions by study investigators on study day 0 and once again between study days 28 and 30. Flea infestations on pets were assessed using visual area thumb counts and premises flea infestations were assessed using intermittent-light flea traps on days 0, 7, 14, 21, and once between study days 28–30, 40–45, and 54–60. RESULTS: Within 7 days of administration of afoxolaner chewable tablets, flea counts on dogs were reduced by 99.3 %. By one month post-treatment, total flea counts on dogs were reduced by 99.9 %, with 97.3 % (36/37) of the dogs being flea free. Following the second dosing on study day 28–30, total on-dog flea burden was reduced by 100 % on days 40–45 and 54–60. On day 0, the traps collected a geometric mean of 18.2 fleas. Subsequent reductions in emerging flea populations were 97.7 and 100 % by days 28–30 and 54–60, respectively. There were 515 total fleas (Ctenocephalides felis felis) collected in the intermittent light flea traps on day 0, and 40.4 % of those fleas displayed visual evidence of having fed. Seven days after initial treatment, only 13.1 % of the fleas contained blood and by day 14 only 4.9 % of the fleas collected in traps displayed evidence of having fed. On day 0, prior to treatment, 60 % of the unfed fleas collected in intermittent-light flea traps were females, but by days 28–30, unfed males accounted for 78 % of the population. CONCLUSIONS: This in-home investigation conducted during the summer of 2014 in subtropical Tampa, FL demonstrated that afoxolaner chewables rapidly and effectively eliminated flea populations in infested dogs and homes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4445572
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-44455722015-05-28 Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA Dryden, Michael W. Smith, Vicki Chwala, Monica Jones, Emery Crevoiserat, Lisa McGrady, Jennifer C. Foley, Kaitlin M. Patton, Paula R. Hawkins, Anthony Carithers, Doug Parasit Vectors Research BACKGROUND: A study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA. Evaluations of on-animal and premises flea burdens, flea sex structure and fed-unfed premises flea populations were conducted to more accurately assess flea population dynamics in households. METHODS: Thirty seven naturally flea infested dogs in 23 homes in Tampa, FL were enrolled in the study and treated with afoxolaner chewables. Chewables (NexGard® Chewables; Merial) were administered according to label directions by study investigators on study day 0 and once again between study days 28 and 30. Flea infestations on pets were assessed using visual area thumb counts and premises flea infestations were assessed using intermittent-light flea traps on days 0, 7, 14, 21, and once between study days 28–30, 40–45, and 54–60. RESULTS: Within 7 days of administration of afoxolaner chewable tablets, flea counts on dogs were reduced by 99.3 %. By one month post-treatment, total flea counts on dogs were reduced by 99.9 %, with 97.3 % (36/37) of the dogs being flea free. Following the second dosing on study day 28–30, total on-dog flea burden was reduced by 100 % on days 40–45 and 54–60. On day 0, the traps collected a geometric mean of 18.2 fleas. Subsequent reductions in emerging flea populations were 97.7 and 100 % by days 28–30 and 54–60, respectively. There were 515 total fleas (Ctenocephalides felis felis) collected in the intermittent light flea traps on day 0, and 40.4 % of those fleas displayed visual evidence of having fed. Seven days after initial treatment, only 13.1 % of the fleas contained blood and by day 14 only 4.9 % of the fleas collected in traps displayed evidence of having fed. On day 0, prior to treatment, 60 % of the unfed fleas collected in intermittent-light flea traps were females, but by days 28–30, unfed males accounted for 78 % of the population. CONCLUSIONS: This in-home investigation conducted during the summer of 2014 in subtropical Tampa, FL demonstrated that afoxolaner chewables rapidly and effectively eliminated flea populations in infested dogs and homes. BioMed Central 2015-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4445572/ /pubmed/26003175 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-015-0897-z Text en © Dryden et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Dryden, Michael W.
Smith, Vicki
Chwala, Monica
Jones, Emery
Crevoiserat, Lisa
McGrady, Jennifer C.
Foley, Kaitlin M.
Patton, Paula R.
Hawkins, Anthony
Carithers, Doug
Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA
title Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA
title_full Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA
title_fullStr Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA
title_short Evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in Tampa FL, USA
title_sort evaluation of afoxolaner chewables to control flea populations in naturally infested dogs in private residences in tampa fl, usa
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4445572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26003175
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-015-0897-z
work_keys_str_mv AT drydenmichaelw evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT smithvicki evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT chwalamonica evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT jonesemery evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT crevoiseratlisa evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT mcgradyjenniferc evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT foleykaitlinm evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT pattonpaular evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT hawkinsanthony evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa
AT carithersdoug evaluationofafoxolanerchewablestocontrolfleapopulationsinnaturallyinfesteddogsinprivateresidencesintampaflusa