Nouvelle déclaration d'incident
No de la demande: 2008-5547
Numéro de référence du titulaire d'homologation: 298760
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: CANADA
État: BRITISH COLUMBIA
Inconnu
ARLA No d'homologation 28347 ARLA No de la demande d'homologation EPA No d'homologation. 4822-538
Nom du produit: Raid Outdoor Ant Spikes - Canada
Oui
Inconnu
Site: Res. - Out Home / Rés - à l'ext.maison
Propriétaire de l'animal
Dog / Chien
Unknown
1
Femme
4
39.00
lbs
Orale
Unknown / Inconnu
Unknown / Inconnu
Système
Unknown / Inconnu
Oui
Non
Unknown/Inconnu
Other / Autre
préciser Chewed up ant bait station found outside, but dog never actually witnessed to be the animal that chewed up this bait station.
(p.ex. description des symptômes tels que la fréquence et la gravité
3/17/2008 1:55:57 PM Consumer reports that her dog has been suffering from a peculiar illness over the past 3 weeks and has been in and out of the vet clinic. The dog has been suffering from edema of the neck and legs. She has also been suffering from unspecified respiratory issues. The DVM suspects she is suffering from some type of vasculitis. The consumer recently found a chewed up ant bait station in her yard, so she suspects her dog could have chewed on this station. She also acknowledges that some other animal could have potentially chewed on this spike.
Modérée
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. The potential dose of abamectin this dog could have received from a single ant bait station is well below any dose of this compound that could potentially lead to illness in a dog this size and is unlikely to have been the cause of this dog's death. The dose of abamectin used within the ant bait station is significant smaller than the dose of ivermectin, a similar compound to abamectin, used therapeutically by veterinarians to treat heartworm in dogs.