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The following letter about Parvo  was written by our vet Ashley Friggle from the Aurora Animal Clinic.

As you can see by the letter below it is vet recommend that we don't allow potential puppy parents into our home until our babies vaccinated. It is also recommend that no breeder allow potential puppy parents in until their babies are a minimum of 8 weeks old. 

We do allow puppy parents to come to our home once our babies are 9-10 weeks old.

To visit just an enlargement of this  letter  click here

Here is some more great information about the parvovirus

This information was adapted from: Dr. Segurson, DVM

Parvovirus

Parvovirus is a highly contagious virus which causes vomiting and diarrhea, and often leads to death in susceptible dogs. Parvovirus is a very durable virus, and can remain in the environment for many months (ref). Parvovirus is primarily spread to other dogs by the fecal-oral route, however it can be spread on hands, feet, clothing, tools, rodents and flies or people traveling from kennel to kennel. Dogs may carry the virus on their fur and feet even if they themselves do not get ill. The virus enters the dog through the nose or mouth and has an incubation period of 3 days to 2 weeks (usually 5-7 days). Because of the incubation period (up to two weeks), it is ideal to quarantine high risk dogs.

 Vaccination will greatly reduce the risk of dogs becoming ill with parvovirus, however no vaccine will protect 100% of animals. In puppies, maternal antibodies interfere with the ability of the vaccine to provide a long-term effect. If the bitch was vaccinated for parvovirus in the past, she will give antibodies to her puppies, via her milk (colostrum). Maternal antibodies gradually wear off, and become ineffective in most puppies between four and sixteen weeks.

 In young puppies, maternal antibodies protect them against disease; however vaccinations will NOT WORK while maternal antibodies are present. The picture below was adapted from Greene’s Infectious Diseases of the Dog and Cat.

 The picture demonstrates how maternal antibodies (‘mean antibody titer’) decrease over time, and how vaccinating while maternal antibodies are higher than the ‘minimum titer to block vaccine’ will not protect  puppies. Because of this risk, we recommend vaccinating shelter puppies every two weeks until they are 18 weeks old, in an effort to make the ‘window of susceptibility’ as small as possible and to increase the likelihood that our vaccine protocol will protect our shelter puppies from parvovirus. Vaccinating more often that every two weeks is not effective. Once maternal antibodies are no longer a factor, the vaccine protects the puppy against parvoviral infection within 2 to 7 days; one vaccine will protect the puppy against disease in this situation. (No “booster” per se is needed with this vaccine.) This may occur at any time from the first vaccine to the last, depending on the amount of maternal antibody the puppy received.  Puppies with parvovirus die within a few weeks of contacting the virus;

    

Parvovirus facts

  1. Parvovirus is very durable in the environment and can persist  for months or years.
  2. Bleach or potassium peroxymonosulfate (Trifectant or Virkon-S) have been proven to kill parvovirus if used correctly.
  3. There is no way to completely disinfect contaminated dirt and grass, although sunlight and drying has some effect. Mechanical decontamination through irrigation may also be helpful, but the area must be allowed to dry thoroughly between applications. Potassium peroxymonosulfate has relatively good activity in the face of organic matter, and can be sprayed on contaminated areas using a pesticide sprayer or other applicator. To be on the safe side, contaminated areas should be off limits to puppies for 1-6 months (choose the longer end of the waiting interval for moist, dark areas, if area can not be heavily irrigated or if it can not be sprayed with potassium peroxymonosulfate).
  4. Parvovirus can be spread on hands, feet, clothing, tools, rodents and flies traveling from kennel to kennel! Dogs may carry the virus on their fur and feet even if they themselves do not get ill. The virus enters the dog through the nose or mouth and has an incubation period of 3 days to 2 weeks (usually 5-7 days).
  5. Puppies under 6 months old are most likely to get severe disease. Rottweilers, Dobermans, pit bulls and mixes of these breeds are especially vulnerable. Adult dogs may get mild disease that is indistinguishable from diarrhea of any other cause. Affected dogs have mild to severe diarrhea, may be dehydrated and lethargic, have vomiting, or can develop severe to fatal secondary bacterial infections.
  6. Vaccination usually prevents disease in adult dogs that have received a vaccine at least 1-2 weeks before exposure, but does not prevent them from carrying virus on fur if exposed. Puppies up to 16 weeks of age may not be protected fully by vaccination.
 

 More info. on the Parvo Virus...

Parvo is the most devastating disease in animals or humans . You must be very careful with young dogs because we have seen puppies catch parvo with four sets of shots.
 
Prevention is the best policy. When you take you puppy to the veterinary clinic always keep the puppy in a crate and never let anyone touch your puppy because they may be holding a puppy with parvo. Never put you puppy on the floor at the veterinary office. Sick dogs walk on these floors all day  long and Parvo is VERY HIGHLY contagious ! Young toy breed puppies usually don't survive parvo .
 
When you leave the veterinary office you can tract Parvo home on you shoes . Clorox is the only thing that will kill the Parvo virus on floors and shoes.
 

Parvo virus causes severe intestinal tract disease in dogs. Parvo first appeared in 1978 and quickly spread all over the world, now being famous as one of the most contagious and deadly diseases in the dog population.
 
What Are The Clinical Signs Of Parvo?
 

The classic symptoms of Parvo are severe vomiting and diarrhea (often with blood in it) along with extreme weakness and dehydration. Parvo literally destroys the lining of the GI tract, allowing bacteria to infect the bloodstream (a serious condition called septicemia). On those occasions when puppies (and sometimes adult dogs) die from Parvo it's usually due to the combined effects of dehydration, upset in the pH balance of the bloodstream, and septicemia. The symptoms of Parvo are remarkably similar to, and as serious as, those of people with radiation sickness (such as from nuclear fallout) with the difference being that recovery is usually complete (meaning with no lasting side effects) in those puppies who recover from Parvo. Although veterinary medicine has made tremendous progress in the treatment of Parvo in recent years and many puppies are being saved, Parvo should still be considered an extremely serious and often fatal disease.
 
How Is Parvo Virus Transmitted?
 
Dogs acquire infection with Parvo virus by ingesting (meaning to swallow) the infectious virus particles. The Parvo virus is one of the hardiest viruses known to science and this virus can live outside the body in a dormant yet infectious state for one to two years. Puppies do not have to be in direct contact with other dogs to catch Parvo since the virus can be spread by people's clothing, shoes, and other inanimate surfaces, and can even travel on the dust in the air. A dog (or puppy) who is shedding the Parvo virus can defecate (go to the bathroom) on a surface and then a susceptible puppy can come by and sniff or lick this surface over a year later and can still catch Parvo.
 

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