Nouvelle déclaration d'incident
No de la demande: 2013-7218
Numéro de référence du titulaire d'homologation: 130090209
Nom du titulaire (nom légal complet, aucune abbréviation): Wellmark International
Adresse: 100 Stone Road West, Suite 111
Ville: Guelph
État: Ontario
Pays: Canada
Code postal /Zip: N1G5L3
Incident chez un animal domestique
Pays: CANADA
État: ONTARIO
ARLA No d'homologation 15176 ARLA No de la demande d'homologation EPA No d'homologation.
Nom du produit: Agricultural Starbar Premium Fly Bait With Muscamone
Inconnu
Inconnu
Propriétaire de l'animal
Dog / Chien
Treeing Walker Coonhound Mix
1
Femme
8.0
32.0
kg
Orale
Unknown / Inconnu
>30 min <=2 hrs / >30 min <=2 h
Système
Unknown / Inconnu
Oui
Oui
Inconnu
Fully Recovered / Complètement rétabli
Accidental ingestion/Ingestion accident.
(p.ex. description des symptômes tels que la fréquence et la gravité
On July 2, 2013 the dog accidentally ingested some of the bait product. That evening the owner contacted the Animal Product Safety Service (APSS) to obtain help. The APSS veterinarian stated that Methomyl is a hot carbamate and can cause signs at very low doses; the median lethal dose (i.e., where 50 percent of animal die) in many species is 10 to 20 milligrams per kilogram (mg/kg). The APSS veterinarian also stated that there was a risk for rapid onset of gastrointestinal (GI) upset including salivation, lacrimation, urination, defecation, dyspnea, and emesis (SLUDDE); bradycardia; dyspnea due to bronchial secretions, tremors, and seizures. The APSS veterinarian said that death could occur in as little as 30 minutes in some cases. The APSS assistant recommended that the owner take the dog to the veterinarian, have the veterinarian call for information, and call back with questions.
Modérée
Later on the evening of July 2, 2013 the owner's emergency veterinarian contacted the APSS to update the case. The emergency veterinarian stated that the owner had attempted to induce emesis using an unknown amount hydrogen peroxide, but this was unsuccessful. The emergency veterinarian stated that emesis was induced at the clinic with Apomorphine and there was no obvious evidence of bait seen. However, the emergency veterinarian did notice that the dog's coat was blue around the mouth after the dog vomited; this was temporary. The APSS veterinarian recommended that the emergency veterinarian monitor the dog at the clinic through 4 hours post-exposure (potentially another 2 to 3 hours), monitor for central nervous system (CNS) signs, monitor cardiovascular function, monitor for respiratory sounds, not give activated charcoal due to the risk for aspirations if seizures occurred, obtain additional information about how much hydrogen peroxide the owner gave the dog, protect the gastrointestinal (GI) tract with Sucralfate and either Famotidine or Omeprazole if the amount of hydrogen peroxide given was over 6 tablespoons (tbsp), give 0.02 milligrams per kilogram (mg/kg) of Atropine intravenously if the dog became severely bradycardic or if there were increased respiratory sounds and give 0.1 mg/kg of Atropine if there were little/no response to the initial dose, manage seizures with Diazepam/barbiturates, manage tremors with Methocarbamol, and call back with questions. On July 6, 2013 the emergency veterinarian contacted the APSS to update the case. The emergency veterinarian stated that the dog remained in the clinic overnight and that no signs developed.