(2) Direct
contact with infected dog urine.
Not exact matches
Most
dogs are
infected by direct
contact with urine from an
infected animal.
It's usually transmitted through
contact with an
infected dog's mucus, watery secretions from the eyes or nose,
urine or feces.
Dogs can become
infected by exposure to contaminated water (both through ingestion or
contact with mucous membranes or broken skin), exposure to
urine from an
infected animal (e.g. contaminated food, bedding, soil, etc.), bite wounds, and ingestion of tissues from
infected animals.
Dogs become
infected with Leptospires (an organism that thrives in water) by consuming
urine contaminated water or
contact with infected urine.
People and
dogs can be
infected through
contact with infected urine, contaminated water and wet soil.
The swift - moving illness is spread by a bacteria in the
urine of rats, skunks, raccoons and other
infected animals, which
dogs can come in
contact with through contaminated water or moist soil.
Caused by canine adenovirus type I, Infectious Canine Hepatitis is transmitted among
dogs by
contact with secretions such as saliva,
infected urine or faeces.
Pets can become
infected through
contact with urine of
infected animals such as raccoons, skunks, rats, feral cats,
dogs, and other animals.
Most
dogs are exposed to the canine distemper virus either by inhaling respiratory secretions from an
infected animal or by coming into direct
contact with an
infected dog's saliva,
urine or feces.
This virus is highly contagious, and spread through
contact with nearly everything associated
with an
infected dog: paws, fur, saliva, bedding, feces and
urine.
The main route of infection is direct
contact of a healthy
dog's nose or mouth
with urine, feces, or saliva from
infected dogs or
with contaminated items such as food or water bowls or people's hands.
Until your puppy has acquired sufficient active immunity, it is too risky to allow him to socialize
with dogs of dubious immunization history, or
with dogs that have been in
contact with the
urine and feces of
dogs potentially
infected with parvovirus and other serious puppy diseases.
Most
dogs are exposed to the virus that causes canine distemper when they inhale the respiratory secretions of an
infected animal, or come in direct
contact with infected feces,
urine or saliva.
It is usually transmitted by
contact with the
urine of
infected dogs, raccoons, rats, skunks, cows, pigs, or sheep.
Dogs of any age can become
infected with canine adenovirus via
contact with infected saliva, mucus,
urine, or feces.
Diseases can be transmitted through
dog urine and feces, so a pup coming into
contact with one or the other can become
infected.
It is a very resilient virus and can be contracted through coughing, sneezing or
contact with an
infected dog's saliva,
urine or stool.
It is transmitted through
contact with infected urine so when your
dog is drinking from a puddle, wading pool, ditch or pond and / or sniffing in the moist soil or grasses, he or she is at risk.
Susceptible
dogs can pick it up from direct
contact with the
urine, blood, saliva, food and water of
infected dogs, or by breathing air containing droplets coughed or sneezed from
infected dogs.
How Leptospirosis is Spread People and
dogs are exposed to the Leptospira bacteria via
contact with infected urine or contaminated water, food, or...
How Leptospirosis is Spread People and
dogs are exposed to the Leptospira bacteria via
contact with infected urine or contaminated water, food, or soil.
The Leptospira interrogans bacteria usually is spread to
dogs when their mucous membranes or open wounds come into
contact with infected urine or
urine - contaminated water, soil, or other items.
This bacterium spreads by
contact with the
urine of an
infected animal;
dogs often are exposed to the virus when swimming in a body of water.