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Check pets for ticks: Manitoba dog dies from hundreds of bites

A Manitoba animal advocate is trying to get people to monitor their family pets closely this Lyme disease awareness month.

Animal advocate taking tick collars, shampoos, prevention tips to Manitoba First Nations

Check pets for Lyme disease: Dog dies from hundreds of tick bites

9 years ago
Duration 1:43
Its Lyme disease awareness month and while its debilitating effects on humans need to be taken seriously, the family pet is even more vulnerable to getting infected.

AManitoba animal advocate is trying to get people to monitor their family pets moreclosely this Lyme disease awareness month.

Katie Powell said she's really vigilant when it comes to checking her dog Koda for ticks.

"Check behind the ears, they like warm spots," she said, picking over Koda.

Powell is the founder of the Save A Dog Network Canada. Last week she rescued a stray on the Sioux Valley Dakota Nation who didn't have Lyme disease, but was covered with wood ticks.
Katie Powell rescued this dog, who she named Gunnar, last week. He was covered in hundreds of ticks when she found him. (Katie Powell)

She took the rescued dog to the vet and was told he was severely anemic in need of a blood transfusion, but he died before treatment.

"They literally killed him, they sucked the blood out of him," said Powell. "He was completely covered in ticks. Layers upon layers of full ticks, little ticks, nothing like I've ever seen before."
Gunnar died after having "the blood sucked out of him" on Sioux Valley Dakota Nation last week. (Jillian Taylor/CBC)

Powell named the stray Gunnar and started The Gunnar Project in his honour. People working with the project are raising money to buy tick collars and pay for other treatments to hand out on First Nations.

They'll also be educating people on First Nations about the dangers of Lyme disease.

Left unchecked, wood ticks can be a problem with pets, but they don't carry Lyme disease. On the other hand, deer ticks do carry the disease.

Dr. Karen Choptain, a veterinarian at Pembina Veterinary Hospital, said dogs that develop a limp or suddenly have trouble walking could be infected.

"[They'll look] like they're walking on glass or eggshells, their backs are arched and they are trying to put as little pressure on their toes," said Choptain.

She said Lyme disease can be prevented with a vaccine, but it's not 100 per cent effective. Special collars, and topical treatments like shampoos and powders can stop ticks from latching onto pets.

Powellplans to give out the collars and topical treatments in Sagkeeng First Nation, Little First Nation, Little Black River First nation and Peguis First Nation in the coming weeks.