Posted on 05/18/2023 2:18:03 PM PDT by algore
Pet owners have been urged to look out for a virus that is spiking in some parts of the US and is lethal in dogs.
Parvovirus, often referred to as parvo — a highly-contagious disease that kills up to 90 percent of pooches — is above average levels in at least three parts of the country, New York state, DC and Missouri.
The most common symptoms are vomiting, diarrhea and loss of appetite. The virus is not tracked, so the total number of dogs to have died is not known.
Veterinarian Dr Hannah Lau told WNBC: 'Any breed of dog can become sick from parvovirus, but Rottweilers, Doberman Pinschers, American Pit Bull Terriers, English Springer Spaniels, and German Shepherds may see an increased risk'
New York health officials released an alert which said the Animal Care Centers (ACC) had diagnosed 14 dogs as of March 14, with the majority in puppies and younger dogs in Bronx and Manhattan facilities.
This far exceeded what is usually seen in a whole year.
And a shelter in Missouri has seen a sharp rise in cases in puppies, with some vets seeing two to three sick parvo-infected dogs every day, and sometimes even five or six. The uptick has been attributed to the warmer weather.
Vets at the non-profit had seen several parvo cases in just 24 hours.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Parvo is highly contagious in kennels, dog parks, dog poop spots, and from shared bowls. The yearly 5 way vaccine usually includes Parvo prevention.
Parvo is a single stranded DNA virus that requires a fast growing cell to replicate. Certain breeds have a susceptibility to the virus. It was first identified the Summer of 78’ when it mutated at a Collie show in Mobile, Alabama. Older dogs are rarely infected and younger dogs with the fastest growing cells most susceptible. The virus replicates in such numbers it is highly infective in an environment as it takes as few as eight virions to cause disease. It is now endemic in the canine world so vaccinate your pups and live with it. The Summer of 78’ was an exciting time for me as I was in veterinary microbiolgy and the growing of the virus in vitro was difficult until we found that it grew on Feline kidney cells which gave us a hint as to its origin. I fully expected it to mutate into the human population by now as it mutates into another species about every twenty to forty years.
Same here.
The government has fun killing millions of chickens and turkeys, now they are moving on to dogs. Just their way of letting you know who is boss.
It’s Spring, fleas and ticks are on the uptick as well..
How did they tear them? And what kind of dogs?
Rottweiler. Chasing squirrels. Both times.
What was the procedure? Autograph or allugraph? I’ve had 2 allugraphs on the same leg.
since 1978 was 45 years ago, what other species is parvo in?
This might not be popular but I’ll bet this is the direct result of humans bringing their pets to places that normally wouldnt allow them. Grocery stores, hotels, planes, etc etc. More interaction between different humans and animals seems like a perfect way to breed new pathogens.
coyotes, wolves, foxes, raccoons, minks, skunks and bobcats to name a few.
More likely the pandemic puppy boom didn’t get vacciinated along with an increase in bad owners who don’t pick up their dog’s poop.
The surgeon used a semi-cylindrical bone saw, in a reciporcating rotary tool, to cut and repositon one of the bones (above or below the joint, I forget..) in order to redistribute the loads normally carried by the ACL (surgeon said it was Crainial Cruciate Ligament).
A reciprocating rotary saw? A Sawzall with a wheel? They just drilled holes in my femur and fibula and stuck a donor in there. It was painfull. More than the injury. (Aluragraph). Autograph is a bodies own tendons borrowed. Alluragraph is a donor ( a deceased organ donor).
Hasn’t the parvo vax been around for a loooong time?
Maybe there’s a new ‘version’ they want to get out, across the country.
She tore them just chasing after a critter in the yard. She’s a mixed breed and weighs about 35 lbs.
No he is mostly a ‘house dog’ but I’m going to get him inoculated now. He was.
“More interaction between different humans and animals seems like a perfect way to breed new pathogens.“
I agree but the dogs uber alles people don’t see it.
Sounds a lot like AIDS
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