Nouvelle déclaration d'incident
No de la demande: 2010-4067
Numéro de référence du titulaire d'homologation: 648245
Nom du titulaire (nom légal complet, aucune abbréviation): S.C. Johnson and Son, Limited
Adresse: 1 Webster Street
Ville: Brantford
État: ON
Pays: Canada
Code postal /Zip: N3T 5R1
Incident chez un animal domestique
Pays: UNITED STATES
État: OHIO
ARLA No d'homologation ARLA No de la demande d'homologation EPA No d'homologation. 4822-529
Nom du produit: Raid Ant Baits III USA (non-specific))
Appât
Oui
Inconnu
Site: Res. - In Home / Rés. - à l'int. maison
Propriétaire de l'animal
Dog / Chien
Australian Shepherd (Aussie)
1
Homme
Inconnu
35.00
lbs
Orale
<=15 min / <=15 min
Unknown / Inconnu
Système
Persisted until death
Inconnu
Non
Mort
Accidental ingestion/Ingestion accident.
(p.ex. description des symptômes tels que la fréquence et la gravité
6/17/2010 A consumer email was forwarded for documentation. The email reports that the consumer placed the baits out, and his dog ingested one of the baits the following morning. The dog was asymptomatic at the time. The consumer replied the following day to report that the dog had died. Additional information from the consumer stated that the dog was "old" and had other "unspecified medical issues" that were more likely the cause of the dog's death. It is not known if the dog was evaluated by a veterinarian.
Mort
The information contained in this report is based on self-reported statements provided to the registrant during telephone Interview(s). These self-reported descriptions of an incident have not been independently verified to be factually correct or complete descriptions of the incident. For that reason, information contained in this report does not and can not form the basis for a determination of whether the reported clinical effects are causally related to exposure to the product identified in the telephone interviews. Raid Ant Bait stations containing 0.01% abamectin have a very wide margin of safety such that no specific poisoning effects are expected from the ingestion of the contents of a single bait station by a dog. For such an exposure to be lethal is inconceivable and lacks and biological plausibility.