Intestinal worms are relatively common in many animal species including dogs and cats. Regular deworming is essential to ensure your pets remain healthy and to reduce the risk to people.
Frequent deworming will kill worms that are present, but it is very easy for your pet to become reinfected and so it’s important to continue deworming your pet all year round. Some intestinal worm species can produce large numbers of eggs, for example roundworm can lay 200,000 eggs per day within five weeks of infestation. It’s important to maintain a regular deworming program for your pets to reduce eggs being shed into the environment.
For routine prevention:
If using a combo product such as Nexgard Spectra, your worming is included in the monthly treatment. This is very safe to give monthly rather than within the above routine.
If you suspect your pet has intestinal worms, we recommend a physical health check and will recommend suitable treatment and ongoing preventative care.
The short answer is yes, many worms infesting domestic animals are zoonotic, meaning they can be transmitted from animals to humans. Different worms cause different diseases and each have their own symptoms. Whilst anyone can become infected by intestinal worms, children and the immunocompromised are at greater risk. One of the most important ways to reduce human exposure is regular deworming of pets.
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