You’re home after a hike with your pup and are considering checking them for ticks. Depending on where you live, it’s probably a good idea, as these harmful bugs can spread some intense bacterial infections. Dr. Aliya McCullough, veterinarian and pet health advocate, shares all the different tick types, the diseases they can carry, how to protect your dog and what to do if your dog gets a bad bite.
When a dog gets bitten by a tick, it can cause a variety of bacterial infections including Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Lyme disease, among several other infections.
There are several different types of ticks, each from various environments that cause several different illnesses. Here are the most common ticks, where they’re located and the diseases they carry:
Unfortunately, there aren’t outstanding signs associated with a tick being attached to your dog. Ticks generally go unnoticed and dogs often can’t feel the tick burrowing. Symptoms typically appear weeks later because of the development of Lyme disease or other bacterial infections.
Ticks typically attach themselves to dogs’ ears, tails, eyelids, underneath their collar, on the legs and between their toes. Swelling and redness may occur around the area of the bite.
Here are a few steps you can take to safely remove a tick from your dog:
If you find a dried, dead tick on a dog, it should be removed (using the steps above). Talk to your vet, too, as they may want to send it to a lab to make sure it wasn’t carrying a bacterial infection.
One way to treat ticks bites is to prevent them from ever attaching to your pup. Some tick preventatives include:
Yes, all ticks should be removed from dogs immediately because they’re parasites that carry and transmit harmful diseases.
It’s important to remove ticks as soon as you spot them because the longer they’re on your pup, the higher the chance of them spreading diseases.
Ticks aren’t always easy to spot, but with our tips, you can keep your pup safe throughout all of your outdoor adventures.
The Dig, Fetch Pet Insurance's expert-backed editorial, answers all of the questions you forget to ask your vet or are too embarrassed to ask at the dog park. We help make sure you and your best friend have more good days, but we’re there on bad days, too.
Photo by Casey Calhoun on Unsplash
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