Nouvelle déclaration d'incident
No de la demande: 2013-1670
Numéro de référence du titulaire d'homologation: 1107261
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: FLORIDA
Inconnu
ARLA No d'homologation ARLA No de la demande d'homologation EPA No d'homologation. 4822-538
Nom du produit: Raid Outdoor Ant Spikes
Appât
Inconnu
Inconnu
Propriétaire de l'animal
Dog / Chien
Pit Bull Terrier
1
Femme
2
30
kg
Orale
Unknown / Inconnu
Unknown / Inconnu
Système
Persisted until death
Non
Inconnu
Mort
Accidental ingestion/Ingestion accident.
(p.ex. description des symptômes tels que la fréquence et la gravité
1/19/2013 Caller's dog chewed on a spike some time in the past several hours prior to the call. No plastic appears to be missing. The dog was reported to have labored breathing heavy and was listless, unable to get up. Follow-up completed on 1/21/2013. Dog was reported to have died in the car on the way to the veterinary hospital. The dog was never evaluated by the 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. The observed symptoms are not consistent with the toxicity profile of this product. The potential dose of abamectin this 30 kg dog could have received from a single 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 be the cause of this dogs symptoms. The dose of abamectin used within the ant bait station is significantly smaller than the dose of ivermectin, a similar compound to abamectin, used therapeutically by veterinarians to treat heartworm in dogs. Typically, when an entire bait station is ingested by a dog including the plastic housing, the primarily symptoms reported are vomiting and diarrhea. Such gastrointestinal symptoms were not reported in this case.