I do the 3 - injection protocol for safety's sake, so that all the dead worms don't hit the dog at the same time.
Dead worms don't swim - they go scooting downstream.
Not exact matches
The
worm and the fire will
do their job on the
dead bodies and nothing will stop until they are finished with them — that is how I see that verse.
Sit and eat
worms, stewing about how one day I'll be
dead and they'll have no record of what I looked like, and then won't they be sorry they didn't offer to get me in a picture when they had the chance;
Amazingly, despite its name, ringworm as nothing to
do with any type of
worm but is rather an infection of
dead layers of skin built up on your cat's body which can kill the fur follicles and cause the fur to fall off.
We know that the dog's activity should be restricted while the
dead worms are clogging up the works, and we can
do this for the next five or six weeks.
A post-mortem was
done, and it showed an embolism, one
dead worm and three dying.
We don't want increased blood pressure that pushes the chunks of
dead worm tighter into the smaller arteries.
I'd like to be conservative and ensure that all of the
dead worms have cleared her system before subjecting her to surgery but I also don't want her to unnecessarily go into heat either (that said, our other two dogs are spayed females and she doesn't have access to any male dogs so pregnancy isn't an issue.)
Since complications are related to how many
dead worms are breaking up and hitting the smaller pulmonary arteries, it would make sense that the dog would
do better if the
worms died one at a time over a long period of time.
This is
done under close veterinary supervision because the
dead and dying
worms can cause clots in his blood vessels.