That seems like an important thing to know if it is true.
That product, and most paste products, are meant to be given as one complete dose at a time to a horse. The paste is not guaranteed to be homogenious and therefore giving one turn may yield less product for protection. I know people that use it but you are taking a chance. I use 1% injectible Ivermectin orally at a dosage of 1cc per 110# once a month. Pretty cheap since 50CC usually runs @ $25.That is for deworming and heartworm, but not for tapes.Ivermectin kills or prevents both hookworms and pinworms. In fact, that is what humans are given for those worms, Stromectol. Most vets use the liquid Ivermectin they keep for mange cases. It is too expensive unless you have a full kennel because so little is used the bottle would expire.
It is off-label use in dogs for those worms. It wont work on tapes I don't think.
I use http://www.tractorsupply.com/tsc/product/durvet-ivermectin-paste-187-608-g
One turn of the dial, once a month.
I asked the company about consistency and it is 100% consistent. It is also not intended to be used as one dose because it is metered by weight depending on the size of the animal. So since it is metered that is proof the product is consistent.That product, and most paste products, are meant to be given as one complete dose at a time to a horse. The paste is not guaranteed to be homogenious and therefore giving one turn may yield less product for protection. I know people that use it but you are taking a chance. I use 1% injectible Ivermectin orally at a dosage of 1cc per 110# once a month. Pretty cheap since 50CC usually runs @ $25.That is for deworming and heartworm, but not for tapes.
In a circular motion?😂I poke them with a stick.
Well then they must have improved their mixing because I find numerous references against using horse paste products on dogs. Also, the horse concentration usually is not the correct concentration for dogs, and I would never take a chance to save literally cents, in fact one reference says it is actually more costly to use. I would not recommend it because medications should have accurate concentrations per weight to be given. Some short cuts are just not worth it.I asked the company about consistency and it is 100% consistent.
That product, and most paste products, are meant to be given as one complete dose at a time to a horse. The paste is not guaranteed to be homogenious and therefore giving one turn may yield less product for protection. I know people that use it but you are taking a chance. I use 1% injectible Ivermectin orally at a dosage of 1cc per 110# once a month. Pretty cheap since 50CC usually runs @ $25.That is for deworming and heartworm, but not for tapes.[
I also use the liquid form orally but give a little bit more twice a month!!
In the pudding indeed! lol!Well Brad here ya go, the proof is in the pudding. Gave heartguard this morning and here it is in the afternoon
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You are giving 1CC per 110lbs of body weight? So using an 80lb dog as an example, you are dosing 7300 micrograms. One "click" of the horse paste is 4,500 micrograms.Well then they must have improved their mixing because I find numerous references against using horse paste products on dogs. Also, the horse concentration usually is not the correct concentration for dogs, and I would never take a chance to save literally cents, in fact one reference says it is actually more costly to use. I would not recommend it because medications should have accurate concentrations per weight to be given. Some short cuts are just not worth it.
The critical measure is believing if the paste was was well mixed on every lot, measuring a "click", and knowing your dog was safely protected. My dose is a deworming dose also besides a heartworm dose. Most people use the liquid dose and a syringe. I use a TB syringe but then my background demanded accuracy and my protocol was written out by a vet.You are dosing 30 times the "minimum" and I am dosing 18 times. Both are safe doses but keep in mind you are dosing nearly twice what I am. A somewhat toxic dose for an 80lb dog is about 72,000 micrograms, or 10 times what you dose and 20 times what I dose.