The Sick Dog

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

A man brought a very limp dog into the veterinary clinic. As he lay the dog on the table, the doctor pulled out his stethoscope, placing the receptor on the dog’s chest. After a moment or two, the vet shook his head sadly and said, “I’m sorry, but your dog has passed away.”

“What?” screamed the man. “How can you tell? You haven’t done any testing on him or anything. I want another opinion!”

With that, the vet turned and left the room. In a few moments, he returned with a Labrador Retriever. The Retriever went right to work, checking the poor dead dog out thoroughly with his nose. After a considerable amount of sniffing, the Retriever sadly shook his head and said, “Bark” (meaning “dead as a doornail”).

The veterinarian then took the Labrador out and returned in a few moments with a cat, who also carefully sniffed out the poor dog on the table. As had his predecessors, the cat sadly shook his head and said, “Meow” (meaning “he’s history”). He then jumped off the table and ran out of the room.

The veterinarian handed the man a bill for $600. The dog’s owner went berserk. “$600! Just to tell me my dog is dead? This is outrageous!”

The vet shook his head sadly and explained. “If you had taken my word for it, the charge would have been $50, but you wanted the Lab work and the cat scan.”

Source:http://www.jokesplace.com/joke/thesickdog.html

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Other warning signs for your dog

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

Is your dog retching without bringing anything up? Or loosing weight? Does your dog show signs of any breathing problems? Is your pet urinating often and showing signs of discomfort while doing so? If left untreated, you could loose your pet.

On the other hand if your dog is drinking water and urinating a lot, it could be a sign of uterine disorder, diabetes or kidney failure.

Other warning signs to watch out for are fever that is beyond the normal 100.5 to 102.5 degrees Fahrenheit, seizures and coughing. Seizures can be a sign of tumors, toxins, or epilepsy

Bruising and Bleeding

Unusual bruising and bleeding can also occur due to a clotting disorder known as ‘hemostasis’. Blood that is unable to clot escapes into the skin to appear as bruises, or into the internal organs, mucous membranes, body cavities and tissues. Reactions can range from mild to severe, depending on the extent of bleeding.

Blood in the urine or stools or bloody vomit, as well as dark colored stools are also a warning sign of stones in the urinary tract, bacterial infections and cancer.

Dogs often get into fights, during the mating season and are more susceptible to accidents as well as bleeding from bite wounds at that time. Don’t get fooled by bites that look as small as a puncture –it could just be a tip of the iceberg. There may also be significant damage to underlying tissues that do not show up on the skin and this can prove fatal. So get the attention of a vet for any bite wound.

If your dog has red eyes

This can lead to blindness and could be due to eye inflammation or abnormally high pressure exerted in the eye due to glaucoma.

Have your dog’s gums turned pale?

Pale Gums or inner linings of the eye and nose could signal shock in your dog. If this occurs, make sure you see a vet as soon as possible as it can prove fatal.  If the pale gums are due to anemia, a blood transfusion would be in order.

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Does your dog have cancer?

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

Blood cancers can be due to an increase in the number of white blood cells in the bone marrow or blood. Untreated, this could lead to bone marrow failure and loss of organ function.

Catching the culprit early

As a dog owner you should be aware of the early warning signs of blood disorders. Pale gums can be a sign of internal bleeding or anemia signaling the need for an immediate blood transfusion. Other warning signs of cancer include-

  • Bleeding gums
  • Blood in the urine or stool
  • Low energy levels.

If you see any of these signs-seek out a good vet immediately.

Most vets recommend a thorough blood test once your pet reaches the age of six. The test should include a ‘complete blood work count’ of the red and white corpuscles, platelets and plasma along with a ‘chemistry panel’ to zero in on organs whose functions are faulty due to an imbalance of electrolytes.

Prevention is better then cure

The good news is that the ‘complete blood work’ tests and ‘chemistry panel’ are easy both on your dog and your pocket. And you won’t have to wait endlessly for the results.

Forewarned is forearmed!

Here are some warning signs to watch out for. If you see your dog doing any of the following, don’t wait. Rush to a vet immediately, because it could be really serious.

If your dog is collapsing or Fainting-

Some dogs recover quite fast after fainting while others can collapse completely due to internal bleeding and the subsequent loss of strength. If your dog shows signs of fainting into unconsciousness- (medically known as syncope) – rush to your nearest veterinarian.

Is your dog pacing around restlessly?

Restlessness and pacing is an indication that your pet may be in considerable distress due to pain or bloating of the stomach or a more serious problem.

Has your dog stopped eating?

Pets below six months are affected mostly by loss of appetite. Loss of appetite could be due to jaundice or the inability to eat. Lack of interest in good food is often the first sign of ill health in your canine. If your dog does not receive nourishment for over 24 hours then things could get serious.

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Follow up Treatment for your dogs

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

If you find that your pet is extremely anemic with pale gums and can barely stand, even after stopping the use of medications that could be causing the bleeding or bruising, then you should give an immediate blood transfusion on an urgent footing, even before a proper diagnosis can be made.

Optimal treatment for your dog

To ensure that your canine gets the best possible care along with the highest chances of survival-you need to properly combine home care with the finest veterinary care that is available in your neighborhood.  Proper follow up to any treatment is especially critical if some tell-tail symptoms lag on. Unchecked, bruising or bleeding can prove a threat to your canine’s life.

It is vital to monitor your pet very closely and notice the severity and frequency of both, bruising and bleeding. To ensure that your dog gets optimal treatment, take the following steps: -

  • Alert your vet if you meet any obstacles during the course of treatment. Make sure that you follow the correct dosage and use only those medicines that are prescribed, as described by your vet.
  • Do not miss any follow up visits as recommended by your vet.
  • You may need to take more then one measurement of platelet counts and clotting tests
  • Omit all medicines that can accentuate bleeding and other symptoms

Source: http://www.terrificpets.com/articles/dogs/health/blood-disorders/

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Painkillers can kill!

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

Check with your vet before using any over-the-counter medications (OTC’s) on your dog. Painkillers like-

  • Aspirin- can result in metabolic acidosis
  • Acetaminophen-Tylenol- can cause liver disease
  • Ibuprofen-Advil can induce kidney disease
  • Naproxen –Aleve- can lead to perforation of stomach ulcers

Poison hotline

Once you believe your pet has eaten a poisonous substance, do not waste a moment. Call your vet or the ‘The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals’ APCA’s Animal Poison Control Center as soon as you can and try to keep a sample of the poison with you.

The ASPCA is affiliated to the University of Illinois’ College of Veterinary Medicine, who offers a 24-hour hotline run by licensed vets that have specialized in toxicology. Along with timely help this 24-hour hotline keeps some ready info on the latest research of the latest products, along with the best specific treatments. If you think your pet is poisoned, don’t panic-just call 888-426-4435.

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Are you killing your dog with kindness?

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

Do not succumb to the whiles of your pet for chocolate (even though every canine drools dreadfully for it!) A large enough amount of chocolate can prove lethal to dogs and cats– for whom it is a toxic substance. This is because even the yummiest chocolates consist of the chemical stimulant- theobromine- that dogs and perhaps cats, are unable to metabolize.

As a result, your pet can have traces of theobromine in his/her blood as much as twenty hours after greedily gobbling up some chocolate. This will increase your canine’s heart rate and be accompanied by-

  • Internal bleeding
  • Chronic diarrhea
  • Hallucinations
  • Seizures
  • A heart attack
  • Eventual death. *

* (Just thirty grams of baking chocolate per kilogram (1/2 ounce per pound) of body weight is sufficient to poison a dog. If your dog is small and has just wolfed down a sizable chocolate, contact your vet pronto. Vomiting can and should be induced up to two hours after your dog has eaten the harmful substance.

You need not panic over much if your dog is larger in size, and has eaten a large amount of chocolate- (even though even a large dog can also find it difficult to digest chocolate.)

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Is your dog poisoned?

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

According to the Veterinary Institute of Integrative medicine, rat or mouse poison can result in chronic hemorrhage- (bleeding) – and bruising. Mouse and rat poisons can look like a yummy thing to eat to most dogs-(maybe that’s due to the shape of the tiny green blocks.) Your pet can easily detect and gobble up these harmful poisons without your even being aware of this!

As far as possible, protect your dog from rat and mice poisons. In the unlucky event of your dog unknowingly swallowing some, you will find an increased tendency to bleed due to ‘Anticoagulant rodenticide toxicity’ or poisoning. The bad news is that this bleeding appears days after ingesting the poison.

Alarmingly, a poisoned pet might start bleeding from the mouth, nose, urine or stools. Bad as this may seem, internal bleeding is scarier, as it can go on unnoticed till more serious respiratory problems or shock sets in. Poisoning can prove fatal; so make sure that you treat it on an urgent footing.

Rat poison in a pet can lessen your pet’s Vitamin K storage and without vitamin K the blood is not able to clot properly. If your canine looks depressed and is bruising and bleeding from any part of the body, while having difficulty breathing, along with signs of weakness—then the chances are that your pet is poisoned.

Vital self –help tips for poisoning

If you know that your canine was poisoned two to three hours ago, the best thing to do is to try and make them vomit it out.

  • Your vet could give your dog the required dose of hydrogen peroxide or apomorphine to induce this vomiting.
  • A dose of activated charcoal can also be given to soak up traces of leftover poison in the gastrointestinal tract.
  • Next a blood test will locate any clotting abnormality.

Make sure that you give a Vitamin K supplement to your pet for from three to four weeks, depending on the type of poison found by your vet.

Remember to re-test these clotting times at the end of the treatment when your pet’s ability to clot blood should show a marked improvement.

But if you are treating your pet about three days later-after the symptoms show up, then there is no point trying to flush the poison out as indicated above. At this stage the only thing that could save your canine is an entire blood transfusion.

You will also need to treat the anemia with plasma and Vitamin K in order to control the bleeding. Sadly, a complete cure at this stage is rare. This is why it is so important to protect your canine from any kind of poisoning.

Where poisons lurk…

Keep your pet away from lawns and gardens that have just been fertilized- since iron-based fertilizers contain harmful herbicides like ‘mulch’ found in cocoa hulls. Like chocolate (YES CHOCOLATE!) Cocoa hulls can be toxic for your pooch if eaten in large enough quantities.

Other danger spots are piles of leaves that could conceal fungi and harmful molds that can produce toxic substances. Protect your pet by covering these piles of decaying matter and remember to clear them away as soon as possible.

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Von Willebrand’s disease

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

If your dog constantly suffers from bleeding of the nose and bloody stools it could be a sign of Von Willebrand’s disease, especially so if your dog is a Doberman or a Pinscher. The cause of this bleeding disease is a lack of a particular protein in the system that makes platelets coagulate. The best treatment for a dog with Von Willebrand’s disease is a blood transfusion.

Other disorders that reduce platelets include: -

  • Viral infections like canine distemper virus and parvovirus
  • Bacterial infections like Salmonella
  • Rickettsial infections like ehrlichiosis
  • Bone marrow cancer, myelofibrosis and myelophthisis
  • Parasites causing heartworm disease and Plasmodium infection

Frequent blood related problems-

While bleeding gums, the odd wound or bruising, can easily stop, other causes of bleeding and bruising could be far more serious. Apart from a low pallet count, common blood related problems in your best friend could be due to poisoning or cancer.

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Why do dogs bruise and bleed?

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

There is nothing very unusual in seeing an occasional tiny bruise or blood spot in the stool, but if it is ongoing and severe –don’t neglect it. There could be a number of reasons for blood in the stools like-

Platelet disorders# Platelet dysfunction may be inherited, or develop later in life, when the platelet count decreases and results in bleeding or bruising. A decrease in the platelet count (also known as ‘Thrombocytopenia’) can also occur due some shortfall of the bone marrow, or due to bleeding.  You should definitely sit up and notice, if your dog’s platelet count is below 25,000. Such a low count can result in hemorrhages that can prove fatal.

Your dog’s low platelet count could be due to cancer, a recent infection, or a drug reaction. In Thrombocytopenia the immune system treats platelets, as it does any foreign body, by destroying them.

Other causes of low platelet count: -

  • Drugs like aspirin, estrogen, sulfas, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, azathioprine as well as albendazole can alter the production or function of platelets.
  • Hormonal imbalances, like the over production of estrogen can contribute to a low platelet count.
  • Spleen disorders
  • The inflammation of the blood vessels-known as Vasculitis
  • Disseminated intravascular hemolysis can also result in a low platelet count

If your canine is a Basset hound, Foxhound, Otter hound, Great Pyrenees or Scottish terrier, then you need to check their blood count; since low platelet counts are common amongst these breeds. Platelet function disorders can also be due to-

  • Sugar diabetes
  • Kidney disease causing Uremia or an increase in waste products
  • Liver disease
  • Vaccination with modified live viruses
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Visible and invisible bleeding in dogs

July 29th, 2009 admin No comments

It’s easy to notice bleeding on your dog’s mouth, nose, eyes, skin or external genitalia. Less visible are signs of internal bleeding. Bleeding in your dog’s intestinal tract will be visible: -

  • As fresh blood in the stools
  • As dark stools
  • As bleeding in the urinary tract that is passed out along with the urine

Clotting abnormalities

Clotting can also result in abnormal bleeding and bruising. These abnormalities are due to the blood’s inability to coagulate or clot. Bleeding due to clotting abnormalities can be seen on the skin, the mucous membranes, internal organs, tissues, and body cavities in the form of excessive bleeding.

Blood in the stools indicates…

Bright red, fresh blood in stools #indicates ‘Hematochezia’ due to bleeding in the lower intestines, as well as the colon and rectum. This bleeding may turn out to be a minor problem- Blood in the stools of a younger dog can indicate the presence of parasites. In older animals it can prove far more serious.

Do not ignore persistent or repeated signs of red blood in the stools of your canine or pet since this can signal a more serious illness (especially in older pets in whom it could be a sign of cancer.)

Dark colored stools or ‘Melena’ indicates the presence of old digested blood that has bled from higher parts of the small intestines or stomach. The discoloration is due to the presence of this digested blood in the stools. If Melena in the stools persists, then it could be an indication of a fatal illness or reaction that should not be neglected.

Possible causes include certain drugs, infectious agents, cancer, swallowed objects, inflammatory gastrointestinal diseases, or clotting disorders that result in extreme bleeding that refuses to clot.

Severe lack of blood clotting- Can also be due to liver failure and intravascular coagulation or snakebites from a viper or a rattlesnake.

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