If you miss a dose of Simparica Trio, give it immediately and resume monthly dosing. Contact your vet if your dog misses a month or more of heartworm prevention—your dog might have become infected with heartworm larvae.
SIMPARICA TRIO should be administered at monthly intervals year‑round or at least within one month of the animal's first seasonal exposure to mosquitoes and continuing until at least 1 month after the dog's last seasonal exposure. If a dose is missed, give SIMPARICA TRIO immediately and resume monthly dosing.
If you miss that monthly dose, your pet is at a potential risk of getting flea or tick bites, which can transmit some serious diseases. Heartworm preventive medicine is especially important to keep on schedule for your pet.
If you miss a dose of your heartworm prevention for your dog, get them back on prevention ASAP—speak to your veterinarian. Six months from that time that you missed is really the only time that we're going to be able to detect whether or not your dog was infected during that period.
Preventing Reinfestation: If you miss a dose or give it late, there is a risk of your pet getting reinfested with fleas, ticks, or other parasites. This can lead to discomfort, itching, and even the transmission of diseases. Maintaining Efficacy: Simparica Trio's effectiveness is based on a consistent dosing schedule.
If you miss a dose of Simparica Trio, give it immediately and resume monthly dosing. Contact your vet if your dog misses a month or more of heartworm prevention—your dog might have become infected with heartworm larvae.
You should give Simparica for dogs once a month. The medicine is effective for 35 days. Thus, even if you forget to give this medicine exactly 30 days later, you have a window of 5 days to give another dose.
The American Heartworm Society has recommended year-round heartworm protection, without missing a dose. A missed heartworm pill leaves your pet exposed to becoming infected, which can happen even in winter. Making monthly heartworm medication part of your pet's health care regimen makes it easier to remember.
The simplest answer to pet parents who forget a month of heartworm prevention is to simply give the pill or administer the application and restart their monthly preventative schedule.
If you forget a month of preventative, make sure to give the next 2 doses on time to "catch up" for that missed month. If you miss several months in a row, you should give your vet a call for advice on when to plan for the next heartworm test and how to get started back on preventatives.
Heartworm Prevention? Your pet may have become infected with heartworm larva during the unprotected months. If you missed less than 6 months of prevention we suggest you start giving the heartworm preventative immediately. Bring your dog in for a heartworm test 6 months from the first missed dose.
Simparica is a monthly tick and flea chewable that gives you a few extra days of wiggle room at the end of the month. Rest assured, your dog is protected (even if you're a few days late giving the next dose).
Long-lasting efficacy: Simparica Trio has been shown to provide up to 35 days of protection against fleas and ticks and up to 28 days of protection against heartworms.
For flea or tick infestations, one treatment with Simparica Trio is effective for up to 5 weeks.
If it has been less than two weeks since the missed dose, give your dog the dose immediately. If it has been over two weeks since the missed dose, contact your vet, who will likely advise you to resume normal dosing next month and have the dog tested for heartworm in six months.
Simparica is a veterinary medicine used to treat infestations with ticks and fleas, demodectic and sarcoptic mange (skin infestations caused by two different types of mites) and ear mite infestations in dogs. After Simparica is given its activity against ticks and fleas lasts for at least 5 weeks.
A: Give the dose you missed immediately, then continue giving the medication on the day you've always given it. If the missed dose is more than 2 weeks late, your dog should be tested for heartworm again in six months (click here to learn why).
Because heartworms must be eliminated before they reach this adult stage, it is extremely important that heartworm preventives be administered strictly on schedule (monthly for oral and topical products and every 6 months or 12 months for the injectable).
The monthly heartworm preventative we prescribe only lasts in a dog's or cat's body for one to two days, not 30 days, due to the lifestyle of the heartworm, it is only necessary for the pet to take the heartworm preventative every 30 days.
Signs of heartworm disease may include a mild persistent cough, reluctance to exercise, fatigue after moderate activity, decreased appetite, and weight loss. As heartworm disease progresses, pets may develop heart failure and the appearance of a swollen belly due to excess fluid in the abdomen.
THE FIRST 30 DAYS AFTER TREATMENT ARE THE MOST CRITICAL! It is best to limit your pet to leash exercise only long enough to urinate and have bowel movements. Avoid all excitable circumstances and stress as much as possible.
Class 4: The heartworms are causing a blockage at this stage, so the symptoms are severe. He will experience constant coughing, exhaustion, and weight loss because he will find it uncomfortable to eat. When your dog is at this stage, known as caval syndrome, it might be too late to save him.
It's best to keep your dog on tick and flea preventive medication year-round since you never know when a thaw will be warm enough to allow ticks to be active again.
Simparica Trio is important for several reasons. First and foremost, it provides comprehensive protection against a wide range of parasites that can harm your dog's health. Fleas and ticks can cause skin irritation, anemia, and the transmission of diseases such as Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
Just 1 Simparica chewable each month starts killing ticks and fleas fast - and keeps on going strong for 35 days. So you have some wiggle room if you give it to your dog a few days late. Simparica is FDA-approved to block infections that may cause Lyme disease by killing deer ticks.