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Conference misery::feline_v1

Title:Meower Power is Valuing Differences
Notice:FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY
Moderator:MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO
Created:Sun Feb 09 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jan 11 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5089
Total number of notes:60366

3857.0. "Worm Shots - How often?" by DELREY::WEYER_JI (Make Sense, not Cents) Tue Jul 31 1990 20:47

    How often can cats get worm shots?  I just took my pretty-kitties
    into the vet in June when they received their rabies shot and worm
    shot, but those darn tapeworms are back.  I know, it's the *darn*
    fleas which I'm trying to get rid of that gave them worms.  But
    now I'm worried about giving another shot to my cats, is it safe?
    
    Any answers appreciated.
    
    -Jill- (Maui & Casino)
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3857.1the vet will knowTYGON::WILDEAsk yourself..am I a happy cow?Tue Jul 31 1990 21:445
your vet would surely be able to determine that.  If no shot is possible,
I know there are oral meds that work...no fun for you or the cat, but they
do work.  Keep fighting those fleas...

			Good luck!
3857.2WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JOset home/cat_max=infinityWed Aug 01 1990 02:509
    Another interesting thing, the Droncit shots cost you more than
    if the vet sold you the Droncit tablet to give yourself, much more.
    
    The cycle for tapeworms is something like 14 days, so your cat will
    keep getting them until the fleas are under control.  Ask the vet
    about the tablets, they will cost you less, and shouldn't require
    another vet visit (since you were just in for tapes a month ago).
    
    Jo
3857.3Recognition!CHEFS::SIFTSWed Aug 01 1990 09:484
    Droncit tablets - we have those in the UK too!  I use them for the cats
    and the dog.  Didn't know Droncit shots existed.
    
    Helen
3857.4BIGHUN::THOMASThe Devon DumplingWed Aug 01 1990 15:5711
	I'm in the UK, and one of my cats gets the worm shots......the
	tablets are very hard to get down him, then he rushes outside to
	eat grass and make himself sick!

	The other takes the tablets with very little problem.

	He has the shots twice a year, I have not had any cause for him to get 
	them more often.

	Heather
3857.5WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JOset home/cat_max=infinityWed Aug 01 1990 16:0412
    It is much better for the cat to be wormed more often than
    to be allowed to harbor parasites.  Of course, in a perfect world,
    we would just eliminate the root of the problem, the fleas.  I know
    how hard that can be, cause I have been working on it constantly
    for months.  My own cats are being wormed for tapeworm fairly often
    with no ill effects.  Of course, I do not routinely worm for tapeworm, 
    I wait until I find segments before giving them the medication. 
                                                                  
    If your cat can take pills, then you can save yourself some money.
           
    Jo
    
3857.6wrap crushed pill in canned food...IOWAIT::WILDEAsk yourself..am I a happy cow?Wed Aug 01 1990 16:236
pilling a reluctant cat can be easier if you crush the pill and place the
powder in the middle of a small clump of his/her favorite canned food...
when you stuff THAT down the throat, you will get a more cooperative
swallow... I generally mix the powder with a tiny bit of food, and then
wrap that in some more food....my reluctant pill-taker bolts canned food
so fast that he never knows he is getting the meds.    
3857.7ChickenCHEFS::SIFTSThu Aug 02 1990 11:379
    I have only once managed to get a worm tablet down Oliver without an
    argument.  I wrapped it in a greasy piece of chicken, gave him some
    undoctored chicken first, gave chicken to the dog too (so Ollie thought
    he might miss out), then gave Ollie the piece with the tablet.  He ate
    it so quickly that he never noticed the tablet.  And this is a cat that
    gets in such a state if you try to give him worm tablets normally that
    he foams at the mouth and throws up.  (This is also the cat that has
    just learned, at the age of nine and a half years, how to catch mice. 
    But that's another story ...)