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  2. Cat worm infections - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_worm_infections

    Kittens should be treated against roundworms with a suitable worming agent (anthelmintic) starting at the age of three weeks and then at two-week intervals until two weeks after weaning. The nursing mother cat should also be dewormed at the same time as the kittens are first treated.

  3. List of mammalian gestation durations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammalian...

    Another factor is due to the shortage of food stocks during winter as the insects are being driven away and as the result, bat hibernate in pregnant condition. [24] In pinnipeds, the purpose of delayed implantation is in order to increase survival chance of the young animals as the mother ensure that the neonates are born at an optimal season. [25]

  4. Albendazole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albendazole

    Albendazole is a broad-spectrum antihelmintic and antiprotozoal agent of the benzimidazole type. [3] It is used for the treatment of a variety of intestinal parasite infections, including ascariasis, pinworm infection, hookworm infection, trichuriasis, strongyloidiasis, taeniasis, clonorchiasis, opisthorchiasis, cutaneous larva migrans, giardiasis, and gnathostomiasis, among other diseases.

  5. Deworming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deworming

    Drenching Merino hoggets, Walcha, NSW U.S. soldiers treating animals with de-worming medication in Eswatini during VETCAP. Deworming (sometimes known as worming, drenching or dehelmintization) is the giving of an anthelmintic drug (a wormer, dewormer, or drench) to a human or animals to rid them of helminths parasites, such as roundworm, flukes and tapeworm.

  6. Oxfendazole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxfendazole

    Oxfendazole is an anthelmintic (wormer) compound used in veterinary practice. It comes under the chemical class of the benzimidazoles. This drug is barely used in horses, [3] goats, sheep, and cattle. It is very scarcely applied on dogs and cats. The drug for livestock is majorly available in the form of pills, tablets, drenches, bolus, etc.

  7. Toxoplasmosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxoplasmosis

    Cats excrete the pathogen in their feces for a number of weeks after contracting the disease, generally by eating an infected intermediate host that could include mammals (like rodents) or birds. Oocyst shedding usually starts from the third day after ingestion of infected intermediate hosts, and may continue for weeks.