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Cause Of Statewide Canine Respiratory Disease Still Unknown

Cause Of Statewide Canine Respiratory Disease Still Unknown
(PD)
Cause Of Statewide Canine Respiratory Disease Still Unknown

The Department of Livestock and local veterinarians are monitoring an outbreak of severe canine respiratory disease in Montana.

Veterinarians in Bozeman, Livingston, Billings, Butte, Big Timber, Roundup and Red Lodge have reported seeing dogs with coughing, difficulty breathing and fever.

Assistant State Veterinarian Tahnee Szymanski said today the symptoms are similar to kennel cough, but the vaccine for kennel cough is not protecting the dogs.

“Unfortunately we just haven’t been able to exactly pinpoint what the cause of the infection is, which is frustrating,” she says.

Dogs with more critical infections have developed pneumonia.

“A lot of these dogs have required antibiotics to get over these infections,” Szymanski says.

Canine influenza is suspected, but more testing is needed to confirm that. A small number of dogs have died and young animals seem particularly sensitive.

“Whether they’re coughing or sneezing or sharing a water bowl, um, you know, putting that out in the environment and then being in close contact with other dogs, is going to allow for the transfer of disease between animals,” Szymanski says.

In the meantime, the Department of Livestock recommends pet owners limit their dog's contact with other pets in the community.

And humans are not to worry about their health if they’re near a coughing pup – Szymanski says, there’s no evidence at this time that this particular respiratory disease is transferrable to humans.

Copyright 2020 Montana Public Radio. To see more, visit Montana Public Radio.

Brie Ripley
Brie Ripley got her start at KUOW Public Radio in Seattle as a work-study student in 2013. She graduated with her degree in Journalism and Anthropology from the University of Washington and began freelancing. Her work has appeared on KNKX Seattle’s “Sound Effect;” KUOW Public Radio’s “The Record,” “Speakers Forum,” and “Local Wonder;” and in the multi-station project, “American Homefront.” Ripley produces the grant-funded radio documentary series “Tie My Tubes” and derives her passion for radio reporting from listening to "This American Life" and reading the works of Tom Robbins while growing up. She moved to Billings in the summer of 2016.