Parvovirus Outbreak!!!

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aoife

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Hey, just thought i would inform all who does not know about the sudden outbreak of the deadly Parvovirus in melbourne. My friend has just lost her 8 week old puppy to this and has another one on the operating table. It is not just contracted by interation with other dogs but from being where in infected one has been.

Please read article below:

DOG owners are being urged to ensure their animals are immunised against the deadly canine disease parvovirus after a recent outbreak in the Maribyrnong municipality.

The Australian Veterinary Association (AVA) issued the warning for the disease, a contagious virus spread from dog to dog by physical contact and contact with faece. It can be especially severe in puppies.

Maribyrnong Veterinary Clinic’s Dr Caitlin Horwood, who has worked in the Maribyrnong/Essendon area for many years, said she usually only sees one confirmed case a year, but she recently saw two confirmed cases in Maribyrnong in the space of one week.

AVA Victorian president Dr Roslyn Nichol said veterinarians around a localised region of western Melbourne had reported seeing a small number of dogs which required treatment and were concerned about the potential for a disease outbreak.

“Parvovirus is a highly infectious disease that affects mainly young dogs and is often fatal in puppies, but any dog may develop the disease,” Dr Nichol said.

“We are particularly concerned, because we do not usually see many cases of parvovirus at this time of year.

“Dogs that have not recently been vaccinated are at risk of contracting this very unpleasant disease which is difficult to treat.”

“If owners notice symptoms of bloody diarrhoea, vomiting, loss of appetite and depression in their dog, they should take them to their veterinarian immediately.

“Affected animals often require intensive treatment in hospital. If any contact has been made with an infected case, owners should seek veterinary advice,” Dr Nichol said.

Dr Horwood said along with the two confirmed parvovirus cases reported in the space of one week recently, there were about six gastro type cases at the Maribyrnong Veterinary Clinic.

She said such outbreaks could be the result of owners simply forgetting to vaccinate their dogs against the disease.

Dr Horwood said while warm weather was not directly linked to parvovirus outbreaks, the recent good weather encouraged owners to take dogs out for walks, where they could come in contact with parvovirus-infected faeces.

She said there was also a danger in moving dogs into a new environment where new owners were unaware if there had been parvovirus cases.

“People don’t realise how long the virus can last in the environment (nine months or more),” Dr Horwood said.

The main prevention and control measure for parvovirus is immunisation.

Puppies should start their vaccination program at six to eight weeks followed by their adult vaccine at 12 to 14 weeks.

All dogs should have a yearly veterinary check and booster vaccination as recommended by their veterinarian.


Please call the vet to double check that your pups & dogs are up to date.

Thanks for reading, i know it is a large article. Sorry if i posted in the wrong area.
 
I feel like making copies of this and handing it to every idiot I see walking tiny, new (unvaccinated) puppies around the streets!
 
I feel like making copies of this and handing it to every idiot I see walking tiny, new (unvaccinated) puppies around the streets!

Exactly, it annoys me too. Ive never owned a dog before but even I know a puppy should be vaccinated before being taken out and about socialising, its not that long to wait.
 
You can't vaccinate effectively against the parvo virus!
There are too many strains of it... Parvo is much more prevalent then people realise...
 
You can't vaccinate effectively against the parvo virus!
There are too many strains of it... Parvo is much more prevalent then people realise...


you can vaccinate against it, jeese theres a lot of wives tails around. and there is not many strains of it at all. but you are correct it is considered to be in nearly all environments. its just a matter of coming into contact with enough virus to get the dog sick. if you vax at the right intervals and keep the dog away from adult and other un vaxcinated dogs untill 2 weeks after the final vax then youw ill be fine.
 
My mate lost his dog 3 months after it's 12 week vacs, a dog he waited 12 months to get..He picked it up at a off leash dog park, now every dog owner knows to keep clear of such places..... Most vacinations arn't 100%.
 
My mate lost his dog 3 months after it's 12 week vacs, a dog he waited 12 months to get..He picked it up at a off leash dog park, now every dog owner knows to keep clear of such places..... Most vacinations arn't 100%.

theres obviously going to be exceptions, did it have its 16 week vaccination?? but its is deffinitely less likely if vaccinated and the symptoms should be less severe
 
If it's up to date with it's injections, it should be... Oh seeing's as your a local, my mates dog picked it up at Kirrawee dog park, it was about 4-5 years back now though...
 
you can vaccinate against it, jeese theres a lot of wives tails around. and there is not many strains of it at all. but you are correct it is considered to be in nearly all environments. its just a matter of coming into contact with enough virus to get the dog sick. if you vax at the right intervals and keep the dog away from adult and other un vaxcinated dogs untill 2 weeks after the final vax then youw ill be fine.

I will say again. You cannot effectively vaccinate against parvo.

More often than not, a dogs own immunity system which develops as it ages will provide protection but like I said... there are many strains of it around anyway so it's often commonsense and pot luck.

Any vets care to comment?
 
I will say again. You cannot effectively vaccinate against parvo.


and i'll say it again, thats BS back that statement up with atleast a shred of evidence before i will give it any credit.


there are not many strains of it, this is not the common cold there is only a very few strains if the vaccine wasn't effective we would be seeing thousands of cases of this. and if it was a new strain as you are saying adults with immunity would be contracting it over and over again.
 
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sydeny had a massively bad outbreak of it 2 years ago as the weather warmed up, but it looked like a new resistant strain. Our vet saw cases of adults dogs fully vaccinated dying of it. some pet shop in the eastern suburbs basically had to shut down their puppies sections since it was practically impossible to contain.
 
I will say again. You cannot effectively vaccinate against parvo.

More often than not, a dogs own immunity system which develops as it ages will provide protection but like I said... there are many strains of it around anyway so it's often commonsense and pot luck.

Any vets care to comment?


Parvo virus can be effectively vaccinated against. It depends on the type of vaccination a dog was given as there is a live vaccination and a dead vaccine. Some vets use either or depending on history of parvo around the area.

But the main point is parvo virus CAN BE EFFECTIVELY vaccinated AGAINST.
 
sydeny had a massively bad outbreak of it 2 years ago as the weather warmed up, but it looked like a new resistant strain. Our vet saw cases of adults dogs fully vaccinated dying of it. some pet shop in the eastern suburbs basically had to shut down their puppies sections since it was practically impossible to contain.


if it were infact a new resistant strain it would have been recorded. if you can point me to an article that would be great, its just that a dog will go to a park that is infected, it will drop the virus in amounts that can get any dog that might be slightly immunosupressed infected. its all about picking up enough viral particles to get sick. in most healthy up to date vaccinated dogs they can fight it off easily. but people dont keep there dogs up to date, there are a crap load of stray dogs running around. and pet shops dont help at all either. and the insane breeders out there who tell there buyers that vaccines dont work dont help either. its like up here, the vet industry tells you that you shouldnt be seeing any cases unless you are in a low socioeconomic area funny how true it is to.

its like in america where they decided that you would only need to vaccinate an adult dog once every 3 years, and the suddenly the parvo cases went through the roof.
 
theres obviously going to be exceptions, did it have its 16 week vaccination?? but its is deffinitely less likely if vaccinated and the symptoms should be less severe

It was fully up to date, it was a rare breed (don't ask me what, it was just a small crappy terrier to me ;) ), he paid big dollars for it, and even bigger dollars to try and save it, It was fully immunised...supposedly..
 
It was fully up to date, it was a rare breed (don't ask me what, it was just a small crappy terrier to me ;) ), he paid big dollars for it, and even bigger dollars to try and save it, It was fully immunised...supposedly..


thats unlucky, really sucks because with nowadays treatments with plasma therapy it is very successful. granted it would be better if we were legally aloud to store blood. sucks that he lost it though.
 
thats unlucky, really sucks because with nowadays treatments with plasma therapy it is very successful. granted it would be better if we were legally aloud to store blood. sucks that he lost it though.

Yeah, he had dogs most of his life, but he had trouble coming to terms with that loss and hasn't "got back on the horse" so to speak, it really crushed him.
 
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