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AHS Educates Practitioners Pg. 2 Volume 3 July 2008 Check out what’s inside Catching Up with Auburn Pg. 5 e information and research on feline heartworm disease continues to evolve, and with it, the KNOW Heartworms campaign. is year, the KNOW Heartworms team continues to focus on educating veterinary teams and the cat-owning public about HARD (Heartworm Associated Respiratory Disease). In addition to promoting the five myths and misunderstandings, this newsletter focuses on the diagnostic issues surrounding feline heartworm disease. Veterinarians will again be able to request an updated KNOW Heartworms clinic kit this summer, look for updates on www.knowheartworms.org. As with the more than 9,000 kits distributed to date, this new kit will contain valuable information for educating both veterinary practice teams and their clients. is kit is based on input from veterinary professionals who used last year’s kit and participated in a survey about the campaign as a whole. A couple of quotes from the survey: “ank you for this campaign. I have strongly believed for a long time that feline heartworm disease does not get the attention it deserves. Now I have research and numbers to discuss with clients, staff and colleagues. Information on HARD was eye-opening; I diagnosed a cat with this days after receiving the info.” “[KNOW Heartworms] gave me the incentive to compose a PowerPoint presentation for my staff, and reinforced my belief that feline heartworm disease is a real threat. I have really changed a lot of opinions on this disease – clients and staff.” In the campaign’s first year, www.knowheartworms.org received thousands of unique visitors every month. Veterinary professionals should continue to visit the Web site, where many useful documents and collateral are available for download in the “For Veterinarians” section. All new materials produced will be posted here as well. e KNOW Heartworms team will continue to reach out to the veterinary community and increase visibility through the media, building on last year’s 382 million media impressions. anks to all who have made a commitment to preventing this serious disease. KNOW Heartworms Promotes Awareness of HARD, Prevention 2007 Contest Winner Update Pg. 8 Understanding Diagnostics Pg. 6 AAFP Committed to Prevention Pg. 3 Technician Leads Charge Pg. 4 KNOW Heartworms aims to educate veterinarians and cat owners about the real threat of feline heartworm disease, which reveals itself as HARD, and the importance of prevention. The American Heartworm Society and the American Association of Feline Practitioners have partnered together for this campaign, which is sponsored by Pfizer Animal Health. Leading organizations and companies in animal health are rallying together for CATalyst, a national initiative to raise the status of the cat. At the CATalyst Summit in February 2008, held by the American Association of Feline Practitioners with initial underwriting from Pfizer Animal Health, participants came together to discuss what could be done about troubling statistics released by the American Veterinary Medical Association that show an increase in the cat population coupled with a decline in veterinary visits for cats. As a result, the Summit attendees developed an action plan to raise the bar for feline care.

KNOW Heartworms Promotes Awareness of HARD, … · newsletter, my own study in the ... MS, Ph.D., about how findings from both him and A. Ray Dillon, DVM, MS, ... with neither specific

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AHS Educates Practitioners Pg. 2

Volume 3

July 2008

Check out what’s inside

Catching Up with Auburn Pg. 5

The information and research on feline heartworm disease continues to evolve, and with it, the KNOW Heartworms campaign. This year, the KNOW Heartworms team continues to focus on educating veterinary teams and the cat-owning public about HARD (Heartworm Associated Respiratory Disease). In addition to promoting the five myths and misunderstandings, this newsletter focuses on the diagnostic issues surrounding feline heartworm disease.

Veterinarians will again be able to request an updated KNOW Heartworms clinic kit this summer, look for updates on www.knowheartworms.org. As with the more than 9,000 kits distributed to date, this new kit will contain valuable information for educating both veterinary practice teams and their clients. This kit is based on input from veterinary professionals who used last year’s kit and participated in a survey about the campaign as a whole. A couple of quotes from the survey:

“Thank you for this campaign. I have strongly believed for a long time that feline heartworm disease does not get the attention it deserves. Now I have research and numbers to discuss with clients, staff and colleagues. Information on HARD was eye-opening; I diagnosed a cat with this days after receiving the info.”

“[KNOW Heartworms] gave me the incentive to compose a PowerPoint presentation for my staff, and reinforced my belief that feline heartworm disease is a real threat. I have really changed a lot of opinions on this disease – clients and staff.”

In the campaign’s first year, www.knowheartworms.org received thousands of unique visitors every month. Veterinary professionals should continue to visit the Web site, where many useful documents and collateral are available for download in the “For Veterinarians” section. All new materials produced will be posted here as well.

The KNOW Heartworms team will continue to reach out to the veterinary community and increase visibility through the media, building on last year’s 382 million media impressions. Thanks to all who have made a commitment to preventing this serious disease.

KNOWHeartwormsPromotesAwarenessofHARD,Prevention

2007 Contest Winner Update Pg. 8

Understanding Diagnostics Pg. 6

AAFP Committed to Prevention Pg. 3

Technician Leads Charge Pg. 4

KNOW Heartworms aims to educate veterinarians and cat owners about the real threat of feline heartworm disease, which reveals itself as HARD, and the importance of prevention. The American Heartworm Society and the American Association of Feline Practitioners have partnered together for this campaign, which is sponsored by Pfizer Animal Health.

Leading organizations and companies in animal health are rallying together for CATalyst, a national initiative to raise the status of the cat. At the CATalyst Summit in February 2008, held by the American Association of Feline Practitioners with initial underwriting from Pfizer Animal Health, participants came together to discuss what could be done about troubling statistics released by the American Veterinary Medical Association that show an increase in the cat population coupled with a decline in veterinary visits for cats. As a result, the Summit attendees developed an action plan to raise the bar for feline care.

Inside & Out

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KNOW Heartworms

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Inside & Out

AHSEducatesPractitionersonDiagnosingFelineHeartwormDiseaseDiagnosing feline heartworm infection is one of the more elusive and complicated aspects of the disease, and it prompts the most questions from practitioners. The American Heartworm Society’s “2007 Guidelines for the Diagnosis, Treatment and Prevention of Heartworm Infection in Cats” includes recommendations on testing, and we hope the more than 450 online views per month prove practitioners are finding the information helpful. Diagnostics are certainly a good focus for this third KNOW Heartworms newsletter, because the disease is more prevalent than previously thought.

I currently practice at two clinics, both located in universally accepted heartworm-endemic southern states, Alabama and Texas. Convincing pet owners to administer year-round prevention is admittedly easier in these areas, but I believe we are effective because our entire team is knowledgeable about heartworm disease.

Although diagnosis is challenging, and current serology tests are far from perfect, it is important for practitioners to test for heartworm disease, both as evidence of the disease’s existence and as a basis for treating symptomatic cats. I myself was skeptical the disease even existed in cats and, as I described in the first KNOW Heartworms newsletter, my own study in the 1990s proved its true prevalence along the Texas Gulf Coast.

Other postmortem studies have also confirmed the existence of feline heartworm disease, but the present battle is to pinpoint the most accurate way of identifying an infection the moment a cat presents with symptoms. Currently, relatively few cats are tested, as only 40,000 heartworm tests are run each year on cats as opposed to 22 million

Dr. Nelson is considered a pioneer for his clinical work in the study of heartworm disease in cats. In 1997–98, after doubting the validity of the incidence of heartworm in cats, he conducted his own study to determine true incidence. His work resulted in a paper presented at the 1998 Symposium, “Recent Advancements in Heartworm Disease.”

CharlesThomas(Tom)Nelson,DVMPast President, American Heartworm Society

“ The number of cats tested each year will go from thousands to millions. ”

—Dr. Nelson

canine heartworm tests. These low numbers can be attributed to the fact that fewer cats are seen by veterinarians and the lack of confidence of practitioners in the current testing modalities, as none are more than 75 percent accurate. An important point to remember is that a negative antibody or antigen test does not rule out heartworm disease. A positive result to either test is significant.

The introduction of new heartworm tests will dramatically change the number of cats tested annually. A widely used FeLV/FIV point-of-care test is being reformatted and a heartworm antigen test is being added. The number of cats tested each year will go from thousands to millions. It will be imperative for practitioners to have a thorough understanding of the heartworm life cycle and the role of both immature and adult worms in feline heartworm disease. A positive heartworm antigen test will indicate the cat has at least one female adult worm or the remnants of a female adult worm that died within a few months. A cat testing negative on an antigen test could still have immature worms or a male-only worm infection. Regardless of the test result, the cat should be

placed on heartworm preventive.

As millions of cats are tested, seemingly healthy cats will turn up positive much to

the dismay of the veterinarian and the pet owner. This is not an automatic death sentence as not all heartworm-positive cats are going to die suddenly. In fact, the opposite is true; most will survive the infection if given the chance. However, pet owners should be attentive to any signs of respiratory distress in confirmed heartworm-positive cats and seek prompt veterinary medical care.

Dr. Brunt is the founder and owner of the Cat Hospital At Towson, the first feline-exclusive veterinary hospital in Maryland. She is the KNOW Heartworms spokesperson representing the American Association of Feline Practitioners, a group for which she has been a board member since 1998, and was president in 2006.

JaneBrunt,DVMPast President, American Association of Feline Practitioners

AAFPCommittedtoHeartwormPreventionAs the spokesperson representing the American Association of Feline Practitioners, I’ve learned more about feline heartworm disease than I ever thought possible! There is certainly a lot to grasp to understand feline heartworms and the disease presentation, HARD (Heartworm Associated Respiratory Disease). Understanding the disease becomes even more challenging when discussing pathogenesis and diagnostics, but the important thing to remember is how easy and necessary it is to prevent.

Our goal with this volume of KNOW Heartworms: Inside & Out is to explain and simplify diagnosing feline heartworm disease, bringing about a change in belief and practice. Once veterinarians across the nation are able to identify and confirm respiratory signs as a result of heartworms, many will realize what we’ve been saying all along: This disease is as serious and as prevalent as FIV or FeLV, and we must prevent it.

AAFP is committed to raising awareness of feline heartworm disease, and I’m proud to say our new pet-owner-friendly Web site, www.catvets.com, features information about feline heartworm disease in its Cat Health Topics section. As veterinarians, we must recognize the importance of pet owner education. Cat owners need to know that if their cat isn’t on prevention, their cat is at risk for feline heartworm disease or HARD. If a cat does develop the disease, the most likely person to first recognize the signs is the pet owner, not the veterinarian. We are responsible for alerting pet owners that the hairball or cough they think their cat has may be more than that. Of course, the easiest way to handle this situation is to

avoid it altogether, and we can do this by administering prevention to all cats in areas where heartworm exists in dogs – indoor or outdoor, kitten or adult, long-haired or short-haired.

I’ve had the unfortunate experience of diagnosing cats with heartworms in my own practice. Few things are harder than telling a cat owner their beloved companion has an incurable disease, which would have been easily prevented.

When a cat presents with any of the signs of HARD: respiratory distress such as coughing or shallow respirations, vomiting, lethargy, weight loss or diarrhea, I include antigen and antibody testing and thoracic radiographs in my workup to help “rule out” HARD as the culprit. While negative serology results do not rule out heartworms, any positive test result confirms the cat has feline heartworm disease. If there are radiographic changes in the pulmonary arteries, I assess the complete blood count and recommend referral for a cardiac consultation. After testing, regardless of the result, I reiterate the need for prevention and treat the signs as indicated.

My hope is that someday soon we won’t need to discuss diagnosis or treatment because cases of feline heartworm disease will be rare – not an outrageous goal considering this disease is 100 percent preventable!

“ We are responsible for alerting pet owners that the hairball or cough they think their cat has may be more than that. ” —Dr. Brunt

Inside & Out

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Inside & OutKNOW Heartworms

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CatchingupwithanAuburnUniversityResearcherIn the last KNOW Heartworms: Inside & Out, we summarized research conducted by Auburn University proving the vast difference between feline and canine heartworm infection and, more importantly, that heartworms do not need to reach maturity to cause severe pathology in cats.

Now, more than a year after the study’s release, we interviewed a leader in heartworm disease research, Byron Blagburn, MS, Ph.D., about how findings from both him and A. Ray Dillon, DVM, MS, MBA, DAVCIM, have changed the way veterinary professionals view feline heartworm disease and what is still to come.

Q You have been presenting your research at dozens of veterinary conferences in the last year, what is the hardest point to convey?

For me, the hardest point to communicate effectively is that cats with heartworms present with neither specific (pathognomonic) signs, nor radiographic lesions that confirm heartworms are the cause. This is confounded by the fact that most of these infections cannot be confirmed by either available antigen or antibody tests.

Q What new fact of feline heartworm disease is most shocking to veterinary professionals?

Veterinarians seem most surprised at the severity of the radiographic and histopathologic lesions caused by immature heartworms. When we view the lesions caused by immature heartworms, they are just as severe as lungs lesions in cats with disease caused by adult heartworms, yet in many areas, fewer than 1 percent of cats are infected with adult heartworms. It is likely that 10 times as many have lesions associated with immature worms.

Q What questions do you get asked most frequently when presenting your data and how do you answer them?

Questions that I get most often include: “How do I treat HARD?” and “If I can’t treat HARD specifically, what is the value of a diagnosis?” At this point, until we can answer these questions definitively, prevention with available broad-spectrum products remains our only recourse.

Q Do you believe you’ve changed perceptions in the last year as a result of your research?

I believe our research has increased awareness of feline heartworm disease demonstrably. We still must deliver more convincing evidence supporting the prevalence of feline heartworm infection in cats, and keep in mind that the prevalence of heartworm infection in cats far exceeds the numbers that we can obtain by antigen and antibody testing.

Q What clinical stories have come out of the woodwork now that veterinarians know more about HARD?

This year I was presented with a report in which an academic pathologist summarized lesions in the lungs of a cat from the Northeastern United States that had died of acute respiratory disease. The pathologist listed HARD as a possible cause. This demonstrated to me that our message of the unique consequences of feline heartworm infection is reaching practicing and academic veterinarians.

Q What questions do you still have as researchers?

Additional questions:

“What is the unique pathogenesis (mechanisms of disease) associated with HARD?”

“Are unique inflammatory mediators involved in the development of disease? If demonstrated, can these unique inflammatory mediators be targets for more accurate diagnosis of HARD?”

“Does repeated infection with heartworm cause increasingly severe HARD lesions in the lungs of infected cats?”

Q How have you expanded your research in the last year and what are your future plans?

I would like to see us expand our research to better understand the pathogenetic mechanisms of HARD, improved diagnostic techniques and specific HARD therapies. I would also like to see us generate additional supportive data on the prevalence of heartworm infection in cats. I believe that our information to date tells us that feline heartworm infection is more common that any of us would currently believe, but we need more.

BeSUREtoAttend

AAFP Fall MeetingSeptember 21-23, 2008Hilton AtlantaAtlanta, GA

Theme: “Feline Urinary Tract Diseases”

www.catvets.com

who still believes heartworms only exist in the South.” Ali added that shelters in her area are still importing dogs from the South, some of which are heartworm positive, and wherever heartworms are in the canine population, they will be in the feline population as well.

Ali lectures to technicians all over the country and has heard just about every excuse for not preventing heartworms. In fact, she had one of her own: “I used to believe the argument that indoor cats were safe from heartworms since they have to be bitten by a mosquito to become infected. Then, last summer I found a mosquito in my house.” She added, “Unless you never open a door or a window, your cat isn’t safe inside.”

Additionally, Ali doesn’t see any downsides to using prevention on her cats. In fact, she even administers prevention every month to the five feral cats living in her backyard. “I squirt it on them when they are eating; it’s so easy to give,” Ali said. She is also involved in a mobile spay/neuter program and when the cats are under anesthesia she applies the prevention. She notes the benefits of products having not only protection against heartworms, but fleas, ear mites and other parasites.

Ali accepts that sometimes veterinarians are the hardest to convince that heartworms are a serious threat to cats. She says it is important to acknowledge heartworms in cats are difficult to diagnose, and that they shouldn’t wait for an influx of positive test results to recommend prevention. It’s also easy for Ali to recommend prevention because even if a client is doubtful of the importance of heartworm prevention, there are products that protect against a range of other parasites, including fleas and roundworms. This means one can treat for fleas while getting the benefits of heartworm prevention for the same investment.

“As technicians, I can’t see any reason why we would not talk to clients about heartworm prevention. If I am going to recommend prevention to a cat owner, I make sure and tell them I want to keep my own cat safe, so I use prevention on my cat,” Ali said. “A huge selling point for clients is what you do with your own pets, and I’m not willing to take any chances on my pets’ health, especially when it’s so easy to protect them.”

TechnicianLeadsChargeforPreventionAlison Gottlieb, BS, RVT, VTS (ECC) of Cedar Grove, N.J. is one veterinary technician who is passionate about spreading the word on feline heartworm disease. However, like many other veterinary professionals, she wasn’t always such an advocate for prevention.

Ali’s first job as a technician was at a cat practice in Baltimore. About 15 years ago, a 16-year-old stray cat was dropped off at the practice. Sadly, “Gary,” as he was named, wasn’t the perfect picture of health. All his teeth had to be extracted, and he had a heart murmur. Additionally, the veterinarian tested Gary for heartworms – not a common test in the early ‘90s – only to find he was heartworm positive.

“From what I understood at the time, if a cat had heartworms, we didn’t treat it as we believed it was self-limiting. Cats were just left with asthma or lung damage,” Ali said. After a short stint as the practice’s cat, Gary went home with Ali. He lived many more happy years, but eventually succumbed to heart and liver disease.

Looking back, Ali said, owning a heartworm-positive cat was just one of many factors that influenced her view on the seriousness of feline heartworm disease. As more and more researchers began to publish studies on the subject, she became interested and concerned.

After Hurricane Katrina shelters all over the Northeast rescued abandoned animals and adopted them out. Many of the pets had heartworms. “We essentially shipped heartworms all over the country following Katrina, so I use this fact to counter anyone

Above: Gary (left) with Finny.

Right: Ali Gottlieb with Gary, her heartworm-positive cat.ByronBlagburn,MS,Ph.D.Auburn University

Inside & Out

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Inside & OutKNOW Heartworms

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throughout the entire course of the disease. “Heartworm infection in cats is frustrating,” Nelson said. “No diagnostic test can reliably detect the recently characterized lung pathology of HARD.”

Even with the given limitations, cats presenting with HARD symptoms should be tested with serology and thoracic radiography. If these tests are inconclusive, then follow up with echocardiography. Veterinarians should monitor diagnosed cats over the clinical course of infection.

“While a good understanding of diagnostic testing is crucial, it remains that prevention is the very best option when it comes to feline heartworm infection,” Nelson said. “Practitioners need to demystify the disease and the complexities of diagnosis to pet owners and therefore be an advocate for prevention.”

The AHS feline guidelines go into much more detail with all of these testing methods and should be consulted as the official recommendations of the Society. The guidelines are available to the public at www.heartwormsociety.org.

UnderstandingDiagnosticsMore and more studies are affirming the risk of feline heartworm disease and the danger it presents to cats. A study showing a 10 percent infection rate proved that in endemic areas, feline heartworm disease is more common than feline leukemia virus infection and feline immunodeficiency virus infection. Furthermore, researchers at Auburn University proved heartworms do not need to reach maturity to cause serious damage to a cat’s lungs. Considering the proven prevalence and the seriousness of an infection, veterinary teams need to familiarize themselves with feline heartworm disease diagnostics.

Diagnosing feline heartworm infection is much more challenging than diagnosing an infection in dogs, but the American Heartworm Society (AHS) reminds us that “a conscious awareness of its existence is critical.” It is important for practitioners to understand what tests are available, be aware of their limitations and perform them in repetition when there is a high index of suspicion. The tests most commonly used are heartworm serology, thoracic radiology and echocardiography. Microfilaria filtration tests are less useful, as cats are seldom microfilaremic when examined.

There are two types of serology tests, antibody (Ab) and antigen (Ag). Results must be interpreted carefully and neither test provides a complete picture. Given the limitations of serology tests, the AHS’s “2007 Guidelines for

the Diagnosis, Treatment and Prevention of Heartworm Infection in Cats” recommends screening healthy cats with both antibody and antigen tests at the same time to increase the probability of making an appropriate diagnosis.

“Since cats can have heartworm disease associated with adult worms and juvenile worms, we need to use both tests as either test can be falsely negative,” said Robert K. McDonald, DVM, DACVIM, Antech Diagnostics consultant.

An antibody test detects early infection by heartworms through the presence of anti-heartworm antibodies. Both female and male larvae can trigger a cat’s immune response, making it possible to detect antibodies triggered from either sex at the late L4 stage. The test, however, does not necessarily indicate a current infection, just that it occurred at some point.

Antibody tests are a good way of proving the risk of feline heartworm disease. “When you’re looking at antibody tests, a lot more cats will be detected as having or have had heartworm infection,” said Leif Lorentzen, DVM, senior medical affairs manager at IDEXX Laboratories. “It is a better assessment of cats that are at risk, and the results give practitioners a better sense of the numbers.”

Another important thing to remember with antibody tests is a negative result does not rule out heartworm infection and antibody levels may decrease as the heartworms mature. “Historically, antibody tests have been thought of as extremely sensitive, but what we’ve learned more recently is that is not the case,” Lorentzen said. “Once a cat is bitten, antibodies don’t stick around forever.”

Antigen tests detect proteins and carbohydrates shed from the reproductive tract of mature female worms and have long been the preferred method for detecting heartworm infection in dogs. The tests can detect heartworms at five to seven months post-infection, and confirm the presence of adult heartworms. However, antigen tests will never identify juvenile worms, a major cause of Heartworm Associated Respiratory Disease (HARD).

Tom Nelson, DVM, KNOW Heartworms spokesperson and immediate past president of AHS, reminds us, “Even though a positive antigen test result is definitive, it only represents the tip of the iceberg when it comes to HARD. Nationwide, 1 percent of cats are testing heartworm antigen positive and 12 to16 percent

are antibody positive. Necropsy studies have shown that half of these antibody-positive cats have HARD.”

As cats are unnatural hosts for heartworms, they rarely house an infection long enough for antigen tests to detect adult worms. False positives rarely occur with antigen tests, however, it is impossible to rule out an infection using antigen tests alone since single-sex infections are common in cats.

Thoracic radiography can provide strong evidence of a heartworm infection. This method can detect the presence of worms four to six months post-infection. The most characteristic radiographic features of heartworm disease in cats, as in dogs, are a subtle enlargement of the main caudal pulmonary arteries appearing to be 1.6 times the size of the ninth rib. These vascular features are visualized best in the ventrodorsal view and may be visible only in the right caudal lobar artery, where heartworms are found most often.

The characteristic morphology of the pulmonary arteries in infected cats, unlike dogs, tends to normalize and may disappear completely, leaving no residual evidence of infection. The cardiac silhouette itself is

seldom enlarged. A bronchointerstitial lung pattern that may clear spontaneously within a few months is a common secondary feature, suggestive of, but not unique to feline heartworm disease.

Other less commonly associated pulmonary findings include hyperinflation of the lungs with flattening of the diaphragm, focal parenchymal radiodensities, consolidated lung lobes, pleural effusion and pneumothorax. In some cases of feline heartworm disease, thoracic radiographs provide no evidence of infection.

Echocardiography is another option for detecting a heartworm infection by identifying the actual presence of worms. Five to six months post-infection, the cuticle, or body wall, of an adult heartworm appears as two parallel lines, often called “railroad tracks,” in the pulmonary arteries, right ventricle and occasionally the right atrium. Limitations of this detection method include image quality, patient cooperation, worm location and the skill of the practitioner.

The time line on the opposite page shows which tests can be helpful at different points in heartworm development, but it is clear that no one test can detect an infection

Nationwide Antigen-Positive Cats IDEXX Data presented AHS 20071

50% of Antibody–Positive cats have lung lesions Browne et al., AJVR 20052

Nationwide Antibody-Positive Cats Heska Data presented AHS 19983

Since 25-30% of cats with adult heartworms are antibody negative, and 50% of cats with known HARD lesions are antibody negative 8 months post-infection, the antibody prevalence data

underestimates the actual number of cats that have been infected and therefore are at risk for HARD. The cats at risk could be as high as twice the base rate, and within this group are cats

that have HARD that cannot be identified with current serological tests. Using a conservative number of an additional 2% added to the 8% identified as having HARD, we have 10 cats with HARD for every one cat identified with adult heartworm infections.4,5,6

H.A.R.D. risk

75-90 days

L3

L4

Juvenile

15 daysL3

Adult

70%

6 months

90%

e

Diagnostics EarliestDetection

AntibodyRadiographyEchocardiographyAntigen

2

4-6

~6

6

2007IDEXXLaboratories,Inc.Allrightsreserved.©

DiagnosticsThroughTime

Tip of the Iceberg: Positive Antigen Tests

8%+2%=10%

1 Incidence of Positive Heartworm Antibody and Antigen Tests at IDEXX Laboratories: Trends and Potential Impact on HARD Awareness and Prevention, Heartworm Symposium 2007, Leif Lorentzen and Anthony Caola, IDEXX Laboratories, Westbrook, Maine

2 Browne, LE, Carter, TD, Levy, JK, Snyder, PS, Johnson, CM. Pulmonary arterial disease in cats seropositive for Dirofilaria immitis but lacking adult heartworms in the heart and lungs. AJVR 2005; 66:1544-1549.

3 Results of Antibody and Antigen Testing for Feline Heartworm Infection at Heska® Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratories, Recent Advances in Heartworm Disease Symposium 1998 Claude A. Piché1,2; Michael T. Cavanaugh1; Ann R. Donoghue1; Steven V. Radecki1 1Heska Corporation, Fort Collins, CO, USA; 2Currently Wildlife Pharmaceuticals, Fort Collins, CO, USA4 Performance of Serologic Test Used to Detect Heartworm Infections in Cats; Synder et al., JAVMA 2000; Vol. 2165 Nelson et al. Incidence of Dirofilaria immitis in shelter cats in southeast Texas. Recent Advances in Heartworm Disease: Symposium 1998: American Heartworm Society, 1998; 63-66. 6 Dillon, AR, Blagburn, BL, Tilson, DM, Brawner, WR, Welles, B, Johnson, C, Spenser, J, Kaltenboek, R, Rynders, PE, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, Auburn, AL. Immature Heartworm

Infection Produces Pulmonary Parenchymal Airway and Vascular Disease in Cats. ACVIM Research Abstract, June 2007.

Inside & Out

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Copyright ©2008 Pfizer. All rights reserved.

REV0208011

Update:2007ContestWinnerEach clinic that entered the KNOW Heartworms Veterinary Hospital Awareness Contest last year demonstrated use of the clinic kit materials and went out of its way to educate staff and clients about feline heartworm disease. Case studies and photos from each of the four winning teams are available on the Web site at www.knowheartworms.org/contest.html.

Last year’s first-place winner, Wolftever Pet Hospital in Harrison, Tenn., is continuing to focus on preventing heartworms in cats.

“Participating in the contest encouraged staff education about heartworms in cats, teamwork in decorating the clinic and teamwork in doing the program at the local elementary school,” Darlene White, DVM, a veterinarian at Wolftever, said. “And, I encourage all clients with sick cats to have heartworm testing done along with other labs.”

Wolftever is also continuing programs and efforts to promote prevention. “I try to make it a daily event to promote heartworm prevention in cats, and in mosquito season, I am going to push [pamphlets and preventives], and probably put an announcement on the outdoor sign to remind owners of the dog and cat mosquito/heartworm problem. I would also like to redecorate the clinic.”

White was pleased to have inspired other practices to promote prevention. “I am big on preventative medicine for myself, and just as much so for my animals,” she said. “The more we can educate the public about preventative medicine, the fewer tragic cases we will see that we cannot really help, or are limited as to how much we can help.”

Top: Wolftever Pet Hospital’s winning team.

Below: Staff at Wolftever dressed up for elementary school presentations on feline heartworm disease.