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The First FDA-Approved Product of Its Kind
Simparica Trio is a once-a-month chewable that protects your dog with three proven ingredients designed for defense. It's available from your vet with a prescription and comes with a 100% satisfaction guarantee.
- Protects dogs against heartworm disease, ticks & fleas, roundworms & hookworms.
- FDA-approved to block infections that may cause Lyme disease by killing deer ticks.
- Demonstrated safe for puppies as young as 8 weeks old, weighing at least 2.8 lbs.
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It’s Time to Enhance Your Dog’s Protection
Studies to support FDA approval showed that 1 dose of Simparica Trio provided 100% protection against heartworm disease.
Proven to kill 5 types of ticks.
Prevents flea infestation by killing fleas before they can even lay eggs. Starts killing within 4 hours, and achieved 100% effectiveness in 8 hours in a study.
Treats and controls roundworms and hookworms to protect your dog from intestinal parasites.
Why Your Dog Needs Protection
See why it’s so important to protect your best friend.
Heartworm disease can be fatal, and it only takes one bite from an infected mosquito.
- Heartworm disease is a year-round threat
Heartworm disease has been diagnosed in all 50 states
Even with routine testing, it can take up to 9 months to detect1
Heartworm disease can be deadly
Deer ticks can infect your dog with Lyme disease, which can cause recurring health problems like arthritis or kidney failure.6
- Lyme disease can be hard to diagnose.
- It just takes 1 infected tick to spread disease that can be harmful, even deadly, to dogs.7,8
- Some ticks can survive freezing temperatures and become active when the temperature rises to 40°F.9,10
- Simparica Trio starts working fast, and is FDA-approved to block infections that may cause Lyme disease by killing deer ticks.
Ticks are found year-round, in every part of the U.S.2
Ticks are responsible for transmitting at least 15 different serious diseases to dogs, including Lyme disease.3
Simparica Trio is FDA-approved to block infections that may cause Lyme disease by killing deer ticks.
Fleas can quickly infest your home.
Fleas start to bite within 5 minutes.4 Those bites can also lead to infectious diseases.5
A dog’s reaction to flea bites may vary from sores and inflammation to hair loss.
Fleas can lay up to 1300 eggs within 50 days,4 but Simparica Trio kills them before they can even lay eggs. In studies it started killing within 4 hours, and achieved 100% effectiveness in 8 hours.
Roundworms and hookworms can hurt your dog.
Intestinal parasites can grow throughout the intestines.
Symptoms include stomach swelling, vomiting, diarrhea and dehydration.
Infected dogs can contaminate the home, putting other pets and people at risk.
Puppies are more commonly infected.
Resources For You
Frequently Asked Questions
Simparica Trio is the first monthly chewable to protect dogs against heartworm disease, 5 types of ticks, fleas, roundworms and hookworms, all in only one monthly chewable.
Simparica Trio has been demonstrated safe for dogs as young as 8 weeks old, and weighing as little as 2.8 lbs.
Give a Simparica Trio chewable to your dog once a month.
Talk to your veterinarian about switching to Simparica Trio from another preventive medication to ensure your dog is kept protected through the process.
Yes. Your veterinarian can prescribe the correct dose for your dog. Talk to your vet today about Simparica Trio.
If a dose is missed, a new dose should be given immediately. If a dose is vomited or spit out, a new dose should be given again. Then, continue on the prescribed monthly dosing schedule.
Simparica Trio works to get rid of ticks and fleas on dogs fast. It starts to kill deer ticks within 8 hours, and fleas within 4 hours.
You can begin using Simparica Trio with puppies as young as 8 weeks old weighing at least 2.8 lbs.
Simparica Trio is FDA-approved to prevent infections that may cause Lyme disease by killing deer ticks.
Important Safety Information: See Prescribing Information. Use with caution in dogs with a history of seizures.Simparica Trio contains sarolaner, a member of the isoxazoline class, which has been associated with neurologic adverse reactions including tremors, ataxia, and seizures in dogs with or without a history of neurologic disorders.The safe use of Simparica Trio has not been evaluated in breeding, pregnant, or lactating dogs.The most frequently reported adverse reactions in clinical trials were vomiting and diarrhea.
References:
- AHS Canine Guidelines 2018. https://d3ft8sckhnqim2.cloudfront.net/images/pdf/2018-AHS-Canine-Guidelines-181114.pdf?1542248135.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Geographic distribution of ticks that bite humans. http://www.cdc.gov/ticks/geographic_distribution.html. Updated June 1, 2015. Accessed March 19, 2019.
- Companion Animal Parasite Council. Ticks. April 12, 2017. https://capcvet.org/guidelines/ticks. Accessed September 10, 2019.
- Byron L. Blagburn, BS, MS, PhD.*, Michael W. Dryden, DVM, PhD. Biology, Treatment, and Control of Flea and Tick Infestations. 2009; 4.
- Flea Allergy Dermatitis in Cats and Dogs. VetStreet website. http://www.vetstreet.com/care/flea-allergy-dermatitis-in-cats-and-dogs. Updated Apr 22, 2014. Accessed Mar 21, 2019.
- Lyme Disease. CDC. https://www.cdc.gov/ticks/tickbornediseases/lyme.html. Accessed March 14, 2019.
- How ticks spread disease. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. https://www.cdc.gov/ticks/life_cycle_and_hosts.html. Updated January 10, 2019. Accessed March 19, 2019.
- Little SE. Changing paradigms in understanding transmission of canine tick-borne diseases: the role of interrupted feeding and intrastadial transmission. In: Proceedings of the 2nd Canine Vector-Borne Disease (CVBD) Symposium; April 25-28, 2007; Sicily, Italy.
- Fleas, ticks & your pet. Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) website. http://www.petsandparasites.org/images/uploads/documents/BC-3844_CAPC_FleaTick_one-color_04.pdf. Updated March 2011. Accessed March 25, 2019.
- Eisen RJ, Eisen L, Ogden NH, Beard CB. Linkages of Weather and Climate With Ixodes scapularis and Ixodes pacificus (Acari: Ixodidae), Enzootic Transmission of Borrelia burgdorferi, and Lyme Disease in North America. J Med Entomol. 2016 Mar;53(2):250-61. doi: 10.1093/jme/tjv199. PMID: 26681789; PMCID: PMC4844560.
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