Tampilkan postingan dengan label rat poison snail bait dogs. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label rat poison snail bait dogs. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 08 Februari 2010

Chino, poisoned dog, is improving!

From my friend Melanie: Chino is BETTER!! His eye is still paralyzed and he has to spend a lot of time crated but it looks like he will pull through for sure! Thanks to everyone for your kind posts about Chino.

After a close call with rat poison, it looks like this dog will survive.

Kamis, 04 Februari 2010

Update on poisoned dog Chino

Update on my friend's dog Chino, featured in my last post-- he's still in serious condition, and is not eating or drinking yet. He is at home, but may have to go back to the vet's for more fluids. He will need regular Vitamin K shots for approximately the next month.

By the way. Chino is a rat terrier, about 20 pounds.

Selasa, 02 Februari 2010

Will we never learn? Poison kills pets

I spent the day with my girlfriend at the vet hospital. Her dog, Chino, ate rat poison over the weekend, and is critically ill. I don’t know how this will turn out, but I do know how it happened, and I’ve seen it happen too many times before.

Dogs don’t have fingers to help them explore their world. Rover uses his nose and mouth. Poisons are manufactured with grains and cereals to make the bait attractive to rats and mice, and therefore to dogs too. And the results are often fatal, especially to small dogs.

Chino got up onto a shelf and behind a pile of boxes to get to the poison. I’ve heard of dogs that knocked over a shelf unit in the garage and ate snail bait that fell to the floor. My own husband once declared (about snail bait): “Tank won’t bother it; he knows,” and he was wrong. Within two hours Tank was having tremors and seizures and we were on our way to the emergency vet.

My friend’s husband swore he had hidden the bait well enough, and he was wrong too. If you set it out, they will find it. Period. Don’t take a chance. Chino has had several blood transfusions, injections of vitamin K, and IV fluids. After $2,000 in care, his lungs are still full of blood, he is lethargic, too weak to walk, and his extremities are swollen. She took him home tonight and if he makes it through the night, she will bring him back to the vet tomorrow for more treatment. Only time will tell us whether Chino will survive.

The poison interferes with blood clotting. Symptoms include bleeding from the nose or mouth, muscle tremors, mild cough (as the lungs fill with blood), breathing problems, vomiting, diarrhea, depression, blood in the urine or stool. Quick treatment by a vet is vital to survival.

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