No, horses do not contract parvo.
no, horses can't get parvo, parvo is a disease that puppies get.
No. Parvo is a disease ONLY in dogs that attacks the cells in the GI tract. This disease is not zoonotic (humans cannot catch it) and neither can felines. Felines can get another form of parvo called panleukopenia unrelated to Parvo with similar symptoms. But dogs can't catch it from cats and vice versa.Source: Veterinary Technician at an emergency and specialty hospital.
The above answer is totally incorrect-It is IMPOSSIBLE to catch parvo from another species! Cats cannot get parvo. They can catch what is called Feline Distemper which is like parvo, but it only happens in cats, they cannot catch it from anything else besides cats, and it is not actually parvo. Same thing with Rodents- rodents can catch something that is "like" parvo but it is not the actual parvo virus.To sum this up only canines can get parvo.
Any dog can get parvo. To prevent it, go to the vet and get the shots are dog normally needs.
Does parvo survive? Parvovirus is a viral disease; seasons, temperature, time, ect. doesn't affect it. So yes, parvo still exists in winter just as it does in summer.
Parvo virus does affect humans and although it usually is a mild disease it can be very serious in young children
Getting your dog the parvo vaccine is not 100 percent protection. Certain breeds are more vonerable to contracting Parvo. Bulldogs, pitbulls, boxers and dobermans are prone to this disease and if they have come into contact with it they could easily get it.
They will normally catch a disease or infection very fast, and die. None have never made it.
Rabies, hydrophobia, parvo, and cancer can affect dogs.Hoof and mouth disease can affect horses. Feline leukemia can affect cats. Mad cow disease can affect cattle. Rabies can affect bats. Fleas can carry the bacteria that infects black rats with the Black Plague.
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PARVO
Horses cannot catch tuberculosis (TB) from cattle, as the strains of Mycobacterium bovis that typically affect cattle are not transmissible to horses. However, horses can be infected with a different strain, Mycobacterium avium, which causes a form of tuberculosis in them. Overall, while both animals can suffer from TB, they do not transmit the disease to each other.