If applied externally, wash it off and wait a few days before applying the correct dose. If the medication is administered orally, you must contact you vet as soon as possible. Depending on the type of medication, the dose and the size of your dog, the dog may require immediate medical attention.
Yes! It well harm your cat because dog flea drops are much too strong for a cat! If you do then immediately wash it off with a wet whipe or a wet (paper) towel! You should just give it cat flea medicine. that is most safe.
What on earth does this question even mean
A dog is effected by a flea about as much as a person in effected by a mosquito.
because his dog gave him a flea disease Dant Dant Dant
The dog is a host. The flea is a parasite.
No, a flea is a flea. There is no "cat flea" or "dog flea". Its just a flea and its just as likely to get a cat or dog.
The dog is the host animal to the parasitic flea.
The dog is the "host" to the flea which is a "parasite".
the flea sucks the dogs blood, therefore the flea benefits, while the dog detriments...
it is considered an overdose and yes it can harm them if you give them to much of the same flea medicine.
I dont know what will happen to your dog but when my dog got his bordetella we also bought some flea tablets and so we gave him one a little while after back home... but anyhoo a a while later he started having like a seizure
NO, see chart: