How come my dog gets a monthly pill that keeps away fleas, ticks and mosquitoes, but I have to put on bug spray every day to get the same effect?

r/

Wouldn’t it make sense to make a monthly pill with the same stuff in it that humans can take?

Comments

  1. LambeauLegend29 Avatar

    Case 1. Researchers compiled data on adverse effects from a series of 57 unintentional ingestions involving lufenuron (1–26.4 mg/kg) in people aged 8 months to 65 years (51% were >5 years). Their findings were:
    One episode of vomiting within 2 hours of ingestion by a 15-month-old boy.
    Diarrhea in a 13-year-old girl that resolved within 8 hours.
    Nausea and diarrhea occurring 24 hours after ingestion by a 53-year-old woman (unknown if related to lufenuron due to the delay in onset of symptoms).
    The authors concluded that lufenuron did not cause any significant toxicity in the human cases they studied (Herrington & Herrick, 1998).

    https://www.poison.org/articles/is-my-pets-flea-medication-lufenuron-poisonous-to-humans-221

  2. MiserableFloor9906 Avatar

    Ivermectin is targeted for horses so this should be just fine. Update us on results in a month. Thanks

  3. billthedog0082 Avatar

    It’s all by body weight. If you were to take a dosage monthly according to your body weight, you wouldn’t make it to the next month. This stuff is POISON.

    Fun fact: if you live in a highly dog-populated area, all those walking, poison-carrying dogs who are taking care of business everywhere are contributing to the “nutrition” of the soil for the grasses and pollinator plants, which in turn kill off the bees and butterflies and other worthy creatures through their pollen and fruit.

    https://beevive.com/blogs/bee-blog/do-our-pet-flea-treatments-kill-our-bees?srsltid=AfmBOopHnXp7I3p0xiCccZawdpxC1JyMORSwNsWUQ6OLsVvd2lq0dt2V

  4. moocow400 Avatar

    Big spray is a repellent, the goal is to not get bit at all. The pill you give your dog does nothing to stop your dog from getting bit, your dog gets bit and then the fleas and ticks die. Even if you could take that pill (which you can’t) you would still get bit, defeating the purpose.

  5. Snurgisdr Avatar

    It just takes forever for stuff to get certified for human use (in normal times). Nobody was all that concerned about keeping ticks off people until maybe twenty years ago when Lyme started becoming a bigger deal. I looked into it a couple of years ago and there were some early trials going on with the anti-tick stuff that dogs get, but it hadn’t progressed very far yet.

  6. Tapeatscreek Avatar

    Because the pills will kill your dog if it lived as long as you do. By the time it becomes an issue, your dog will be dead.

  7. Hot-Win2571 Avatar

    You may need some daily bug spray, but look up how to treat clothing with Permethrin.

  8. FulcrumH2o Avatar

    The stuff you give your pet will give you cancer.
    Pets don’t live long enough that it would affect them. Humans live longer, so.

  9. Notquitearealgirl Avatar

    You live long enough that you’ll suffer from organ failure if you do the same thing.

    It would work though.

  10. agbishop Avatar

    Alternatively, You could spray Permethrin on clothes, socks, hats and shoes … this will give extended multi day/week protection

  11. wwhite74 Avatar

    Also Different animals process stuff differently.

    Chocolate, good for people, bad for dogs

    Garlic and onions, good for people, bad for cats.

  12. sugahack Avatar

    As much as I enjoy not having fleas in my house, we really need to get away from the kill it with fire mentality

  13. Designer-Pound6459 Avatar

    I can’t actually answer your question but, had terrible reaction to bites as a child. I take Brewers Yeast during the biting bug season. It really, really helps. Vitamin department, GNC, online, wherever.

  14. throw1away9932s Avatar

    You can use permethrin. It will last up to a month I think. (Shingles medicated treatment) it does have some long term use consequences I forget that make it not recommended for long periods of time. 

    I’ve used it on long back country trips in tick territory. It worked. 

  15. launchedsquid Avatar

    because you don’t take the pill that you give way to your dog.

  16. Neat_Wave_6234 Avatar

    For what it’s worth, last summer I was taking chemotherapy and mosquitos either didn’t want to bite me or died immediately after biting me. That is always an option. Didn’t have to shave anything. No bugs bothered me. Chemo girl summer was pretty lit.

  17. Posyaako Avatar

    Why not just wear a flea collar, much easier