โJun-04-2013 01:43 PM
โJun-05-2013 01:16 PM
โJun-05-2013 01:09 PM
Pawz4me wrote:rockhillmanor wrote:
My Danes were all well above the weight of a 40 lb beagle.
Not to get off on another tangent, but a 40 pound beagle would be *very* overweight. In general healthy weight beagles run from about 15 to 30 pounds (depending on whether they're 13 or 15 inch beagles). When I was with beagle rescue it wasn't unusual for us to get females a little under 15 (at healthy weight). So some of the testing could be on smallish dogs.
My vet, who tends to be conservative, has always advised going for the lower dosage for dogs who are right above the cut off. My Brittany hovers around 47 pounds and the vet has always recommended using Frontline Plus in the 23-44 pound dosage rather than the 45-88 pound dose.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJun-05-2013 11:49 AM
rockhillmanor wrote:
My Danes were all well above the weight of a 40 lb beagle.
โJun-05-2013 11:37 AM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJun-05-2013 11:21 AM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJun-05-2013 10:33 AM
BCSnob wrote:
What you want are R&D test kennels with every breed of dog for testing all drugs before being approved for sale on the market, breed specific doses and side effects should be determined for every drug, and there should be breed specific dose packages.
Perhaps instead of testing drugs on breeds with varying levels of genetic mutations to assess for "sensitivities" across the various breeds; breeders and breed organizations should be breeding dogs with fewer genetic mutations (more like the less sensitive test beagles).
IMO when drugs are found to be safe with beagles but not other breeds; the problem is not with the drug but with the genetics of the other breeds (excluding the size differences).
โJun-05-2013 09:43 AM
โJun-05-2013 09:19 AM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJun-05-2013 06:41 AM
rockhillmanor wrote:Perhaps because the "senstive" breeds are more inbred/less genetically robust (have genetic mutations), in much the same way Collies are "sensitive" to ivermectin due to the MDR1 genetic mutation.
Safety testing required before products are registered may be inadequate. Specifically, Farwell said the beagle is the standard laboratory animal used for companion-animal safety studies, but that breed is not sensitive to spot-on products. โThe beagle is not the appropriate animal,โ he said. He did not say what changes, if any, the agency would propose on testing protocol.""
โJun-05-2013 06:38 AM
โJun-05-2013 06:20 AM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJun-05-2013 05:49 AM
BCSnob wrote:rockhillmanor wrote:I would not be surprised if some small dogs (<10lbs) are getting too much volume of drug when the entire amount of the smallest weight package is used.
NO, I sure would not. Some small breed dogs have problems even with the correct dosage. If you have not opened it why not just return it?
The max dose/lb calculations above indicate any dog under 11.3lbs getting the entire small dog package would exceed what the drug company has setup as the max dose/lb for the larger dogs.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJun-05-2013 04:31 AM
rockhillmanor wrote:I would not be surprised if some small dogs (<10lbs) are getting too much volume of drug when the entire amount of the smallest weight package is used.
NO, I sure would not. Some small breed dogs have problems even with the correct dosage. If you have not opened it why not just return it?
โJun-05-2013 04:18 AM
Use Frontline Plus for Dogs (fipronil 9.8% and S-methoprene 8.8%) on dogs and puppies 8 weeks or older. Frontline Plus for Dogs is available as 0.67 ml applicators for use on dogs and puppies up to 22 lbs, 1.34 ml applicators for dogs 23-44 lbs, 2.68 ml applicators for dogs 45-88 lbs and 4.02 ml applicators for dogs 89-132 lbs.