Do Cats Get Heartworm?
The answer to this question is an unequivocal yes, but feline heartworm disease is a lung disease rather than a heart disease as it is in dogs. The parasite is the same but because the heartworm's natural host is not a cat, the interaction between worm and host creates a very different condition. It isn't good for either the cat nor is it good for the worm.
When Heartworm Meets Cat: The Biology
The story begins with a mosquito, just as in the canine situation. The mosquito feeds on a heartworm-infected dog, the heartworm microfilaria (the youngest larvae) are sipped up into the mosquito during feeding, and develop in the mosquito's body for the next couple of weeks. This is all according to the plan for the heartworm's life cycle until the mosquito bites a cat instead of another dog.
In the third stage, larval heartworms enter the cat's body and develop in the tissues. The feline body is an inhospitable host and worm development is fraught with immunological attack. By the time the larva has reached its 5th stage, it is on its way to the pulmonary arteries to complete its maturation but most infections will end here as the feline immune system is nearly relentless in its assault. At best, only about 25% of the original infecting larvae will survive to adulthood, which means most infections are aborted in this last stage of larval development.
Most cats with adult heartworms only have a few worms (1-3 on average) and development to the adult stage takes an extra couple of months in the feline body compared to the canine body. Chances are that there will be a single sex worm population rendering worm reproduction impossible. Only about 20% of feline infections produce microfilaria (youngest worm larvae); further, the feline immune system is so aggressive that the larvae only live a matter of weeks whereas they can live for up to 2 years in a dog. When the adult/parent worm dies inside the cat, a huge amount of inflammation is generated, and many cats do not survive this stage. If the cat does survive, there is likely long-term damage to the lung tissue.
It is unclear what percentage of an area's feline population will be infected. The standard statistic is that a region's feline incidence will be approximately 10% of the canine incidence but this appears to be a low estimation since feline infection cannot be defined by the presence of adult worms.
- Cats living in heartworm areas should be given heartworm prevention medications just as dogs should.
- In one study, 25-30% of heartworm-infected cats were described as being indoor cats. Many mosquito species are not shy about entering homes.
Cross section under a microscope of normal cat lung tissue. White areas would be full of air.
Thanks to the American Heartworm Society for this picture. Image courtesy of Dr. Ray Dillon and Dr. Byron L. Blagburn, Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine
It turns out that heartworm disease in cats is not really comparable to the canine disease. In dogs, the disease is vascular (adult heartworms cause trouble by plugging up the pulmonary arteries and generating inflammation there). Adult heartworms make it to the dog's pulmonary arteries after a long maturation process that starts with a tiny larva being deposited adjacent to a mosquito bite in a tiny droplet of mosquito saliva. The baby heartworms do not cause much trouble in dogs and it is not until they have reached substantial size and final location that they are problems. In cats, heartworm disease is more frequently a lung disease and not a vascular disease at all. It is the baby worms that cause all the trouble in feline heartworm disease. If we consider that most feline heartworm disease is from immature worms, the 10% statistic becomes substantially higher.
Heartworm disease in cats can produce an assortment of clinical pictures:
- Coughing, wheezing, difficulty breathing
- Vomiting
- Disease related to embolism or abnormal clots
- Extreme nosebleed
- Neurologic signs may occur, and are likely associated with larvae accidentally migrating to the brain.
- Ten to twenty percent of cats experience sudden death which is probably associated with the death of adult worms.
- Many cats never show noticeable symptoms and approximately 80% clear the infection on their own.
How many cats are infected without symptoms? The answer is not clear because it is the symptomatic cats that get the most medical scrutiny.
Heartworm-Associated Respiratory Disease, or “HARD”
Also known as Pulmonary Larval Dirofilariasis
As stated, cats are not a natural host for the heartworm, which means the migrating larval heartworms are not likely to complete their life cycle. To recap from above, baby heartworms called microfilaria are sucked up by the mosquito feeding on an infected dog. The ingested young heartworms must spend enough time (several weeks) in the mosquito's body to develop into an infective stage, at which point they are ready to infect a new host. The infective stage heartworm larva is deposited in a drop of mosquito spit adjacent to a mosquito bite, the larvae crawl into the skin puncture made by the mosquito, gain access to their new host, and continue to develop in the soft tissues of the new host, eventually making their way into the circulation and to the host's pulmonary arteries.
The migrating young worm uses molecular signposts to tell it how to get to its host’s pulmonary arteries where it wants to finish growing up, mate, and live out its life. The worm is prepared to read CANINE signposts and does not always migrate correctly trying to understand feline protein signals. The worm may get lost and end up who knows where in the body. If the young worms get to the pulmonary arteries at all, most of them are killed by the especially reactive feline immune response against them.
It is this immune reaction that causes heartworm disease in cats and it can start as soon as 75-90 days after the infecting mosquito bite.
When young heartworms die in the pulmonary arteries, the immune system breaks them into fragments and attempts to remove them. The resulting inflammation leads to lung disease which manifests as coughing, respiratory effort, and vomiting. The inflammation associated with the death of fifth-stage heartworm larvae is vastly compounded should a coexisting adult heartworm die. In this situation, yet more inflammation results, and even if the cat survives, all this inflammation creates permanent damage in the delicate lung tissues.
HARD mimics feline asthma and the two diseases look identical on radiographs. Cats with HARD will cough, wheeze (a musical respiratory sign similar to a sigh), and vomit (though it may be hard to tell aggressive productive coughing from vomiting). Breathing may be shallow and rapid and may progress to actual respiratory distress. Heartworm testing is the only way to distinguish these conditions.
Section of a lung from a cat with circulating larval heartworms. The cells of inflammation have thickened the tissues so that oxygen absorption is challenged and there is far less room for air. This is the type of lung change typical of heartworm-associated respiratory disease (HARD). Thanks to the American Heartworm Society for this picture. Images courtesy of Dr. Ray Dillon and Dr. Byron L. Blagburn, Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine
Vascular Disease is Separate from HARD
While in most situations feline heartworm disease is a lung disease and not a vascular disease as it is in dogs, sometimes cats do get adult worms in their pulmonary arteries just as dogs do. These adult worms do not live as long as they do in the canine body and they do not achieve the same length/size. If they find a mate and give birth to microfilariae, the microfilariae are promptly killed by the feline immune system within the first month. In short, in the feline pulmonary artery, heartworms are much smaller. You would think this would make for milder vascular disease, but because cats are so small even one adult worm takes up a great deal of space in the vasculature. The more usual lung disease is all the worse if the reaction against the immature worms is complicated by a surviving adult worm in the vasculature. When this parasite finally dies, the subsequent blood clots and inflammation is frequently fatal to cats.
Most heartworm disease in cats is caused by the inflammatory reaction generated by the worm. In dogs, heartworm disease is mostly about the obstruction of blood flow from the physical size of the worms.
Symptoms of Disease
The cat's immune system is extremely reactive against heartworms. For this reason, it is virtually impossible to detect microfilariae in an infected cat (their immune system removes them too quickly). Also, symptoms of infection tend to be more immune-related than heart failure-related. Cats develop more of a lung disease, complete with respiratory distress, and chronic coughing or vomiting. Feline heartworm disease is often misdiagnosed as feline asthma. Sudden death may occur just as it may occur in infected dogs.
In cats, there are two phases where the disease can exert symptoms. The first is when immature worms reach the lung and pulmonary arteries, as early as 75 to 90 days after infection. Even small worms are inflammatory and disruptive to circulation. Cells of inflammation infiltrate the lung and interfere with the cat’s ability to breathe. The second phase where problems can occur is when the worm dies. Since cats are not the natural host for this parasite, most immature worms that make it to the lung are killed. The presence of the dead worm is extremely inflammatory. (Imagine your body trying to remove or digest the dead body of another animal inside your lung and circulation!)
The effects of this kind of widespread inflammation may reach far beyond the lung and circulatory system. The kidney can be affected as well as the gastrointestinal tract and even the nervous system.
Heartworm disease is primarily a lung disease in cats, not a heart disease.
Diagnostic Testing
Antigen Testing
In dogs, diagnosis is usually not complicated. A blood sample is tested for proteins that can only be found on the skin of the adult female heartworm. Most infected dogs have a population of worms in their arteries, so if even one female worm is present an antigen test will show positive. In cats, disease is caused by immature worms, not adult worms female or otherwise, so this kind of testing has limited applications. There may be only a couple of male worms or no adult worms at all to generate a positive antigen test, yet the cat is infected.
Microfilaria Testing
In dogs, testing for microfilariae (offspring of adult heartworms born in the host’s body) are also commonly performed. Unfortunately, in cats, microfilaria testing is virtually worthless. First, infected cats usually do not have enough adult worms for the production of offspring. There may be only a few adult worms; single-sex infection is common. Further, microfilariae, if any, are simply cleared too quickly by the host's immune system and are rarely detected. As mentioned, in cats heartworm disease stems at least in part from migrating immature larvae. No adult worms (and thus no off-spring) are necessary for disease so microfilariae testing is not worthwhile in cats.
Antibody Testing
Antibody testing may be more sensitive but is not adequate alone. A negative antibody test is good evidence that the cat is not infected; however, a positive antibody test may indicate several things. It could indicate a mature infection with one or more adult worms, immature worms in the body, or a past infection. (Antibody levels will remain somewhat elevated after the heartworms have long since died.)
So if no single test is reliable, what are we supposed to do for testing? First of all, unlike dogs where annual screening is the norm, healthy cat screening is probably not necessary. Instead, testing is best done if a cat is sick and heartworm disease is suspected. There is still some controversy about what testing should be accomplished in a symptomatic cat. Both antibody and antigen tests in combination are recommended by some experts, while others feel the antibody test alone is probably adequate. Of course, a cat with respiratory disease probably should have chest radiographs and cardiac echocardiography to further define the condition at hand.
Treatment
Since the major signs of disease in the cat are due to inflammation and immune stimulation, a medication such as prednisolone can be used to control symptoms. A bacteria called Wolbachia commonly live within the heartworm and enhances its ability to generate inflammation. A course of doxycycline is often recommended to address these bacteria. The doxycycline course is short but the prednisolone will most likely be a several-week course that may be repeated.
If the cat does not appear sick, the American Heartworm Society recommends attempting to wait out the adult worm's 2-3 year lifespan and simply monitor chest radiographs every 6 months or so. The median survival time is 1.5 years for heartworm infection in cats. Radiographs are monitored to check progress.
One might wonder why we cannot use the same treatment as we do for dogs to kill any adult heartworms a cat might have. Actually, the same heartworm adulticide therapy used in dogs is best not used in cats as it is extremely dangerous to do so and is considered a last resort. There may not be a choice, however, depending on the degree of illness from the heartworm disease. Approximately one-third of cats receiving heartworm adulticide therapy will experience life-threatening embolic complications when the worms die suddenly (generally an unacceptable statistic). One month of cage confinement is typically recommended to control circulatory effort after adulticide treatment and adulticide therapy should be considered the last resort for an infected cat where symptoms of the disease cannot be controlled with prednisone.
Prevention
In studies of infected cats, 25% of infected cats were considered indoor-only cats. Because of this and the disastrous effect of even one heartworm to a cat, the American Heartworm Society recommends monthly prevention for all cats living in heartworm-endemic areas. Read their feline guidelines.
The good news is that feline heartworm infection is preventable and there are currently four medications on the market that are reliably effective.
Ivermectin
The dose of ivermectin (the active ingredient of Heartgard) needed to prevent heartworm infection in cats is about four times higher than in dogs. Heartgard was the first FDA-approved heartworm prevention medication available for cats. It is a monthly flavored chewable available by prescription.
Milbemycin Oxime
Interceptor® also makes a monthly chewable for cats with the same active ingredient (milbemycin oxime) as Interceptor for dogs. Interceptor for cats also protects against hookworms and roundworms. Milbemax is similar but adds praziquantel for regular tapeworm removal.
Selamectin
Revolution® entered the anti-parasite scene in 1999. This product covers fleas, roundworms, hookworms, and ear mites in addition to preventing heartworm in cats. Revolution Plus is a more recent update with enhanced flea and tick control. Either form of Revolution is an effective heartworm preventive. These products are applied topically rather than orally.
Moxidectin
Advantage Multi® combines imidacloprid for flea control and moxidectin for heartworm prevention in one product. This product is also applied topically. It covers roundworms, hookworms, and ear mites as well as heartworm. Similarly, Bravecto Plus® combines fluralaner for fleas and ticks with moxidectin for worm prevention. This product also covers the same parasites as Advantage Multi plus ticks.
For more information, see the American Heartworm Society.