Wednesday, September 28, 2011
The dreaded PARVO!
Another case of parvo came into the office this week and it makes me ask the question, WHY?!?! Parvovirus is a very common disease of dogs that attacks the cells of the intestinal tract. It is much more prevelant in puppies but is not a puppy only disease, adults can contract parvo as well. There is not a specific treament for parvo, we just treat the symptoms until the body's immune system can clear the virus. Just like the flu in humans, it is much more devastating to the young than it is adults. The difficulty with treating parvo disease is the fact that most patients are vomitting and have that distinct foul smelling diarrhea. That foul smell is from the digested blood in the intestinal tract. So when the patient has it coming out of both ends if you will, keeping the patient hydrated is very difficult to do at home. Under those circumstances, treatment includes hospitalization of the patient and keeping them on isolation to prevent spread of the disease to other patients in house. IV anti-biotics are often indicated to keep the patient form getting septic and anti-nausea meds can commonly help. There is no set repsonse time to treament, ie some respond in 24-48 hours and some stay in the hospital for 7-10 days. Obviously, when a patient is in intesive care with IV fluids and IV anti-biotics, not to mention the clean-up that is involved, the cost of that care can get espensive and there is a much better, less expensive, healthier option, VACCINATE! Vaccines are very effective against parvo virus. Now, I did not say that vaccines one time will prevent parvo. I recommend at least 3 rounds of vaccines for puppies starting at 6 weeks of age and prefer 4 rounds. Vaccines keep your pet and your checkbook healthy and are so easy. Parvo virus on the other hand..... well let's just say you don't want your puppy or bank account to experience it>
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Thanks, Dr. Rozell...we are seeing SO many cases and outbreaks of parvo across the country and it's hard not to make a connection between the outbreaks and the decline in preventive care of our pets. Hopefully your patient has done well and pet owners will take your words to heart!
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