Puppy Parasites

COMMON Puppy Parasites


I think it is important that every dog owner educate themselves on the common puppy/dog parasites in order to properly care for their dog. PARASITES are a COMMON issue in any dog’s life. They are in all our environments and although at Hermeierdoodles we try our hardest not to send any puppies home with parasites sometimes it just happens. We worry very much about your family and want to do everything right. So I thought this is the best way to let people know what they are dealing with.

 

INTERNAL PARASITES:


Roundworms:
Did you know that every puppy is born with roundworms? Yes even if the mother is dewormed prior to birth, they are passed through her milk! This is why we have a strict deworming schedule here! They look just like long pale spaghetti noodles! They can also pick up roundworms from wild animal feces. The eggs are visible on a fecal test or visible in the puppy’s feces.

  • Pyrantel or Fenbendazole is recommended.

Tape Worms:

Fleas are actually the cause of tapeworms! If your dog has a flea on them and chews at their skin to try and kill them, they actually ingest the flea and end up with tapeworms! These are not seen on a fecal test and are only visible in the stool and look like flat short white rice segments.

  • The treatment recommended is praziquantel (one dose, then follow up dose 2 weeks later) Sometimes these can be hard to get rid of, so this is why it’s so important to follow a strict flea/tick regimen.
  • Hookworms or Whipworms:

These two worms are pretty scary! They can come from so many sources, either from up from the ground and migrate through the skin or they can ingest larvae from the ground. They can’t be seen without a microscope but they can be seen by your vet on a routine fecal test! Hookworms can cause severe anemia.

  • Treatment is usually fenbendazole (Panacur) along with an iron supplement and is very effective.


All of the above are EASILY PREVENTABLE with deworming and preventatives! These last ones are not so easy to see on a fecal test and are a little more tricky to treat without the pup reinfecting itself!

Coccidia and Giardia

Coccidia and Giardia are invasive, non-worm parasites that live in a dog’s intestinal tract. Transmission of these parasites can come from infected soil, water, feces, food, other animals, and more. These two parasites are harder to prevent as they are always there and just become a problem during the stress of transition and travel. Is it really a worm? No, it is more of a bacterial parasite.

Coccidia is single-celled and found more frequently in puppies, where they may acquire it through their litter mates or mother. It causes a gel-like yellowish loose stool and can multiply quickly. As with all parasites, diligent sanitation practices are important to stave off these parasites.

  • We give a preventative medication at 6 and 8 weeks for Coccidia called Toltazuril and we have never had Coccida, we will gladly send you medication if your pup tests positive. Some vets use a similar medication called Marquis, or an older medication called Albon


Giardia is quite common and is naturally found in the gut–affecting up to half of all puppies, up to 80% can clear giardia on there own except in our case the young puppies.  In reality, it is more how the puppy is tolerating it and whether or not their is a sufficient good bacterium in the gut to tolerate the growth of giardia.  Most healthy adult dogs won’t have problems. Many can have no symptoms from giardia and it is hard to find on a routine fecal test. During the stress of traveling and rehoming these protozoan-type parasites are opportunistic and can surface. They cause loose fatty stool, gelish or dark greenish stool and can cause loss of appetite and dehydration. Where is it? It’s at dog parks, boarding facilities, kennels or anywhere with numerous juvenile dogs where they can step in poop and then later lick their feet. They can also pick it up by eating feral cat feces or wild animal feces. There is a very sensitive Giardia Antigen Snap Test now that a lot of vets use because they can’t see it on a routine fecal test. This test is so sensitive it can show a positive if the dead giardia dna is still present until it leaves the pups intestinal tract. So if the pup did have any giardia here and we gave our 5 days of prevention before they leave, they may still show a positive. It may take 10 days to show a negative. Some pups will never show a negative! Some pups just carry it! We have taken this one step further and now have the giardia snap test at home so we test a lot to ensure your puppy goes home parasite free.

  • Treatment is oral dewormer (fenbendazole) and some vets will add Metronidazole (antibiotic). Usual treatment is for 10 days, then wait 10 days to retest. Even after 20 days, they can still show a positive! So don’t freak out! Mature dogs in the home usually do not have problems catching it. If the pup is having normal stools, I would not continue with round after round of the medicines. Metronidazole over a long period can cause seizures. Probiotics are a great idea for young puppies especially when on antibiotics.
  • Since Giardia has become so common in young puppies, we are now sending home medication to hopefully prevent it from surfacing during the stress of transition. If your pup does test positive, please let us know and if needed, we would be happy to send you more medication and even a home test kit to recheck 10 days after meds.
  • We also now will be administering Colloidal Silver to all of our puppies to help with this parasite.  We are excited to take this new step in fighting the fight against parasites. 

Please know, we do EVERYTHING we can to prevent ALL parasites and spare no expense doing so.

How It Works
Deposit and Application Explained

Complete Application

YOU MUST first complete our puppy application before placing a reservation deposit.
You can contact me, Dannette, at any of the following options with questions:
Phone- 563-568-8611,
Email-dhermeier1@yahoo.com
Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/HermeierDoodles/

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Review

We will review your application and reach out typically within 24 hours. After your application is reviewed we will contact you. We want to have a conversation with our buyers about their preferences for a future puppy and combine them with our knowledge of what puppies or litters have best suited families similar to yours. We will work together to decide which litter’s reservation list is best for you.

Deposit

Once you have talked to a member of HermeierDoodles through any of the above routes of contact and solidified which litter is best for you, place your $400 dollar nonrefundable deposit. This deposit comes out of the final price of your puppy. This deposit is nonrefundable but if fewer puppies are born than families on the reservation list, your deposit can be moved to a different Hermeier Doodle litter. Reservations on a first come first served basis, and families are added to reservation lists in order of when their deposits arrived.