Cat Deworming

Prevention & Diagnosis of Cat Heartworms

What are intestinal parasites?

They are parasites that inhabit the intestinal tract of cats. They include hookworms, roundworms, tapeworms, whipworms, coccidia, which are protozoan parasites, and probably a few other types that I am not thinking of right at this moment. But it’s any kind of a parasite that inhabits the intestinal tract.

How do intestinal parasites impact the health and wellbeing of my cat?

If they are living in the intestines, that means they’re likely attached to the intestines and stealing nutrients from the cat, so the most obvious effect would be weight loss. Maybe that animal won’t gain weight or thrive as well as another cat who does not have intestinal worms. Other issues could be with the stool, the consistency of the stool. Oftentimes, cats that have intestinal parasites will have a softer stool, perhaps even diarrhea, which, in turn, will lead to weight loss or difficulty gaining weight.

What are some signs and symptoms of intestinal parasites in my cat?

Weight loss and soft stool probably would be the two most common symptoms of cat intestinal parasites. Sometimes you’ll actually have blood in the stool as well, but it’s almost always going to be a stool issue in some way, shape, or form. Very rarely with heavy, heavy, heavy parasite loads, you can have vomiting and inappetence and those kinds of things as well, but that’s usually a much more advanced sign.

What preventative measures can be taken to ensure that my cat does not get worms and other parasites?

The keyword there is preventative, so various preventative products. The one I use is called Revolution or Revolution Plus; there’s also Advantage Multi for cats. Those products are the two big ones I have used. The benefit of those products, specifically Revolution Plus because that’s the one I happen to use right now, is that they prevent heartworm disease, hookworms, roundworms, fleas, ticks, and ear mites. It does all six things when you just put a liquid solution on the back of the neck once a month. The old expression, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure has never been more true than in a product such as that. So this entire discussion can be avoided if you simply do proper preventative care on a regular basis.

Can you see worms in your cat’s stools?

Some of them, yes. Most of them, you will not. The most common ones that people know of are things like hookworms and roundworms, maybe even whipworms, and it’s very unlikely that you’ll see those. Roundworms are big, yes, but when they’re alive, you’re probably not going to see them. It’s just the eggs that are deposited in the stool. Once you give them a dewormer and those worms are passed, yes, you might see those.

Probably the most popular answer to this question is tapeworms. Tapeworms are segmented worms. Those segments break off individually. Even when the head of the worm is attached, I know this is nasty, but when the head of the worm is attached to the intestinal lining, the tail of the worm will break off one segment at a time, and those are passed in the stool. So, oftentimes, those are diagnosed by a phone call or a visit from the client saying they are seeing worms in their cat’s stool. So yes, you can see some, but not all. It’s usually tapeworms.

How will a veterinarian diagnose intestinal parasites in my cat?

Tapeworms are often diagnosed by the word of the owner more times than not, because the eggs themselves are contained in those little segments, and unless one of those busts open, it’s very hard for us to diagnose unless there’s so many that we see them on the exterior, around the rear end of the cat or the owner will tell us. The more typical answer to that question is by using a fecal flotation examination. So what we do is we take some stool from that particular animal, either brought in by an owner or removed as pleasantly as possible by us. We will set up the stool sample and if there are worm eggs present, those worm eggs will float to the top of this very dense solution that we use, and then they can be viewed under a microscope.

What are some possible conditions caused by intestinal parasites, and what are the treatments?

Again, I keep going back to weight loss as the biggest thing, because either weight loss in and of itself or soft stool, diarrhea, which leads to weight loss, are some of the most common things that you’re going to see. Anemia is another one because certain types of worms, like hookworms, for example, do latch onto the intestines and they feed on blood. So if you have enough of those, your cat can get anemia, anemia meaning a lack of red blood cells. So you can have that, particularly in kittens. You would have to have an absolute truckload of hookworms in an adult animal for them to get anemia, but in a kitten, not so much. You’re talking about a one or two-pound kitten, so it wouldn’t take near as many to see that same effect on them.

Why is early detection and diagnosis of intestinal parasites so important?

It’s just like any other disease, honestly. The sooner you can catch it, the more effective you are going to be at treating it, and the more effective you’re going to be at treating it before any adverse signs can arise. Again, I’ll use the kitten reference, but if you let a kitten go for several weeks with a heavy parasite load, you may not have a kitten anymore. So the sooner you can get that diagnosed, and certainly treated, the better off you’re going to be long-term.

When should my cat see a veterinarian for deworming?

We usually start very early, so the first visit. When they see us for the first visit, usually between six and eight weeks, we will check a stool sample and deworm accordingly. Even if I see a negative stool sample, I will oftentimes still deworm; that’s just me personally. I will oftentimes still deworm them at least once with an appropriate broad-spectrum dewormer, because I don’t want to trust a piece of stool that’s this big, in hopes that maybe it’s a low-worm burden and they’re not shedding a lot of worm eggs or anything. I don’t want to miss that, so I usually cover them with a dewormer the first time as a precaution.

And then after that, I’ll do two negative samples as a kitten back-to-back, and then once I’ve achieved that, I usually rely on the preventatives that we mentioned earlier in the discussion to maintain that status for me. Beyond that when they come in, at least for their annual checkups, if not bi-annually, we will often recommend a stool sample to ensure that they’re still clear.

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