Heartworms are parasitic worms that live in dogs. They have a complicated life cycle which includes one stage of development in the gut of mosquitoes, then a larval stage in the skin and capillaries of dogs, then an adult stage in the pulmonary veins of a dog. These parasites were given the name "heartworms" because they swim against the current of blood flow in the major lung blood vessels, and when a dog with heartworms dies the worms end up swimming back into the right side of the heart where they are found on post-mortem necropsies.
The good news is, there are quite effective heartworm preventatives on the market currently, in both a monthly oral tablet as well as a monthly topical spot-on liquid. The bad news is, once a mature heartworm infestation is present in your dog, the treatment is dangerous, expensive and in some cases lethal to the dog.
Heartworms actually don't live in the heart - they live in the pulmonary arteries in the lungs and spend their lives swimming against the current of the blood. Heartworms live on the nutrients in the blood, absorbing the various sugars, amino acids, fats and other dissolved components of the blood.
the heart
They enter when you eat Raw meat
No, heartworms gather nutrients from the blood streaming by them. In fact, heartworms don't actually live in the heart of dogs - they live in the large pulmonary arteries in the lungs but swim into the heart after the dog dies.
No, beer does not kill heartworms.
Heartgard only kills the microfillare, the immature stage of heartworms (or baby heartworms). It will not kill the adult heartworms that live in the heart. That is why it is very important to have your dog tested first by a Veterinarian for heartworms.
Trees have nothing to do with heartworms.
There is no over-the-counter drug to cure heartworms.
Only if you have a mosquito on you that is carrying heartworms. It's extremely rare for humans to get heartworms, and I don't think it would be easy to transmit to your cat if you did have them.
One example of endoparasite is when dogs have heartworms. The heartworms are the endoparasite because they are living inside the dogs body. The heartworms are benifited, they are called the parasites, and the dog is harmed, it is called the host.
No
A creamy white
Yes.
If a dog has heartworms, a vet is the ONLY thing you should be considering. Aspirin will not deal with this serious condition.