All Discussions Tagged 'toxic' - MyCorgi.com2024-03-28T12:09:44Zhttp://mycorgi.com/forum/topic/listForTag?tag=toxic&feed=yes&xn_auth=noRx Warning: Skin med fatal to dogstag:mycorgi.com,2017-01-19:1150197:Topic:19619782017-01-19T15:06:35.437ZVicky Hayhttp://mycorgi.com/profile/VickyHay
<p>A reminder to be extremely careful with prescription (or OTC) medications when you have dogs in the house: <a href="http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/skin-cancer-cream-killed-dogs-fda-says-n708436">http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/skin-cancer-cream-killed-dogs-fda-says-n708436</a><br></br><br></br>Apparently a skin cream commonly prescribed to treat pre-cancerous skin conditions is highly toxic to dogs. If you use a product containing fluorouracil (brand names are Carac, Efudex and…</p>
<p>A reminder to be extremely careful with prescription (or OTC) medications when you have dogs in the house: <a href="http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/skin-cancer-cream-killed-dogs-fda-says-n708436">http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/skin-cancer-cream-killed-dogs-fda-says-n708436</a><br/><br/>Apparently a skin cream commonly prescribed to treat pre-cancerous skin conditions is highly toxic to dogs. If you use a product containing fluorouracil (brand names are Carac, Efudex and Fluoroplex), be sure to keep it in a CLOSED cabinet or drawer, well out of doggy reach. Don't leave it in your purse, in a pocket, or on a table or countertop.<br/><br/>Even a small amount of this stuff can kill a dog.</p>
<p></p> A petition to require xylitol labelingtag:mycorgi.com,2015-09-22:1150197:Topic:19276262015-09-22T17:37:31.903ZJohn Wolffhttp://mycorgi.com/profile/JohnWolff92
<p><a href="https://www.change.org/p/require-labeling-of-deadly-ingredient-to-dogs?utm_source=action_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=395312&alert_id=LtyTeoYXKc_K1bNJNx6i3gc9SNuRtBtzHMLdhbsM0pY%2ByHT5EJ8K%2FqsFYKrLFLy01jNk%2Fm5hSfH" target="_blank">petition to require xylitol labeling</a></p>
<p>Xylitol has its uses -- my dentist recommends xylitol losenges for oral hygeine -- but few people are aware that it can be lethal to dogs at low doses. I keep mine at work and do not…</p>
<p><a href="https://www.change.org/p/require-labeling-of-deadly-ingredient-to-dogs?utm_source=action_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=395312&alert_id=LtyTeoYXKc_K1bNJNx6i3gc9SNuRtBtzHMLdhbsM0pY%2ByHT5EJ8K%2FqsFYKrLFLy01jNk%2Fm5hSfH" target="_blank">petition to require xylitol labeling</a></p>
<p>Xylitol has its uses -- my dentist recommends xylitol losenges for oral hygeine -- but few people are aware that it can be lethal to dogs at low doses. I keep mine at work and do not allow it in the house.</p>
<p>I believe it binds tightly to canines' glucose-sensing receptors, sending them into insulin shock. Makes them "think" their blood sugar is way too high.</p>
<p></p> Pesticides/fertilizers and your corgitag:mycorgi.com,2011-05-23:1150197:Topic:10518362011-05-23T01:13:23.074ZEmily Trupianohttp://mycorgi.com/profile/EmilyTrupiano
<p>Applying pesticides for the sake of aesthetic purposes? My coworker's Boxer has been in critical condition for the past few days because of his neighbor's lawn fertilizer. My coworker said that when they were spraying the lawn, they were actually able to smell it strongly from inside of their home. Somehow the dog ingested it. Now he's vomiting blood and having bloody diarrhea. I'm sure if he were a smaller dog, he would be dead right now. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>And obviously those fumes cannot be…</p>
<p>Applying pesticides for the sake of aesthetic purposes? My coworker's Boxer has been in critical condition for the past few days because of his neighbor's lawn fertilizer. My coworker said that when they were spraying the lawn, they were actually able to smell it strongly from inside of their home. Somehow the dog ingested it. Now he's vomiting blood and having bloody diarrhea. I'm sure if he were a smaller dog, he would be dead right now. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>And obviously those fumes cannot be safe for adults or children to be breathing in either!</p> Stuffed toy risk?tag:mycorgi.com,2010-04-05:1150197:Topic:6442392010-04-05T17:29:24.979ZGeri & Sidneyhttp://mycorgi.com/profile/GeriSidney
<p>This post was passed along to me by a friend of mine. I tried checking if it is true through Snopes.com but I could not find anything relevant. I thought it might be a good idea to post, just in case!</p>
<p> </p>
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<p>TOY WARNING!!!<br></br><br></br>Last night at agility class, a vet, who is a fellow agility student was<br></br>telling us about a case she had this week. The dog ate a child's…</p>
<p>This post was passed along to me by a friend of mine. I tried checking if it is true through Snopes.com but I could not find anything relevant. I thought it might be a good idea to post, just in case!</p>
<p> </p>
<p>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</p>
<p>TOY WARNING!!!<br/><br/>Last night at agility class, a vet, who is a fellow agility student was<br/>telling us about a case she had this week. The dog ate a child's <span style="BORDER-BOTTOM: #0066cc 1px dashed; BACKGROUND: none transparent scroll repeat 0% 0%; CURSOR: hand" id="lw_1270488255_0" class="yshortcuts">teddy bear</span><br/>and was very sick. When she opened the dog up to remove what she thought was<br/>an <span id="lw_1270488255_1" class="yshortcuts">intestinal obstruction</span> she found a huge gelatin type mess inside and the<br/>dogs intestines were black and the tissue dead. The dog will die no surgery<br/>can fix him up there was no living intestine left from stomach to colon.<br/><br/>This was not an obstruction. .... so she called the manufacturer of the<br/>Teddy Bear on a quest to find out what the gel was and what killed the dog.<br/>Turns out the stuffing in children's toys contains ingredients for <span style="BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none; BACKGROUND: none transparent scroll repeat 0% 0%; CURSOR: hand" id="lw_1270488255_2" class="yshortcuts">flame<br/>retardants</span> and mite control! It is designed to become a gel. It is highly<br/>toxic. Now you would think a child's toy would be safe because it is for<br/>children, but they don't expect a child to eat the stuffing of the toys...<br/>huummmm that seems a bit scary too. But we all know dogs demolish stuffed<br/>toys.<br/><br/>So do not give or buy your dog any children's stuffed animals... some people<br/>get them at goodwill etc. The vet will be posting a warning and story and I<br/>will send any other facts as needed and as I learn more. Maybe some<br/>children's toys do not have this ingredient, but better to be safe than<br/>sorry. So meanwhile, make sure all your dog toys are for dogs. Please pass<br/>this on... it is a horrible death she described and one that can be avoided.<br/>Permission granted to cross-post<br/><br/>PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO ALL PET OWNERS!!!!!!</p> D-Con Mice/Rat Pellets --- Do You Know What to Do?tag:mycorgi.com,2009-09-05:1150197:Topic:5134872009-09-05T15:11:26.735ZDeannahttp://mycorgi.com/profile/Deanna
<p style="text-align: left;"><img alt="" src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/3036608987?profile=original"></img></p>
<br />
My loveable Topaz loves to chase rabbits, squirrels, cats, lizards, frogs, virtually anything that moves fast on the ground.<br />
<br />
Friday morning when she caught a mouse on first snap I was so proud of her! -- Until I realized she wasn't going to present me with her "gift." Instead she was savoring it for herself, taking it out to the backyard to finish off.<br />
<br />
Then it hit me -- I've got mice/rat pellet poison down in the house and this mouse could have…
<p style="text-align: left;"><img src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/3036608987?profile=original" alt=""/></p>
<br />
My loveable Topaz loves to chase rabbits, squirrels, cats, lizards, frogs, virtually anything that moves fast on the ground.<br />
<br />
Friday morning when she caught a mouse on first snap I was so proud of her! -- Until I realized she wasn't going to present me with her "gift." Instead she was savoring it for herself, taking it out to the backyard to finish off.<br />
<br />
Then it hit me -- I've got mice/rat pellet poison down in the house and this mouse could have ingested it.<br />
<br />
Immediately I managed to convince Topaz to relinquish her "prize." Relief came quickly as I inspected the carcass and noticed no signs of punctures wherein bodily fluids could have been transferred to Topaz, and threw the remains out with the trash. (This was around 6:30 in the morning.)<br />
<br />
The rest of the day was normal, work, lunch, home, no visible signs of illness.<br />
<br />
Fast forward -- 12:10 a.m., Saturday -- while on the phone with a friend on one of those long, lengthy,<br />
talk-about-nothing chats, I heard an odd noise coming from the kitchen.<br />
<br />
Upon entering the room there was Topaz, with both paws holding a package of open D-Con Mice/Rat poison pellets while she's lapping up the little turquoise beads of death as fast as she can and swallowing them whole!<br />
<br />
I screamed -- Topaz looked at me very quizzical -- momentarily stopped -- and then continued. I couldn't believe my eyes! With every tongue movement, I could see several -- not just a few -- beads being swallowed.<br />
<br />
I grabbed the package away from her as gently as I could, and began reading the back panel. Of course there was the usual fine print that's unreadable, and in my state of mind I wasn't comprehending most of it. Then I got to the part about "If Swallowed By Pet or Animal: Call Veterinarian Immediately for Treatment Services."<br />
<br />
Did I look at the clock and say, "I can't wake him up now"? Not only no, but H3LL, NO! Of course I called and woke him up!<br />
<br />
First thing he said: "Do you have hydrogen peroxide?"<br />
<br />
Yes.<br />
<br />
"Okay, how much does she weigh?"<br />
<br />
About 35-40 pounds.<br />
<br />
"Let me get my glasses on."<br />
<br />
(Hurry! Hurry! -- I'm thinking to myself)<br />
<br />
"Give her about 2 tablespoons full."<br />
<br />
I've got a monoject cc syringe, how much is that?<br />
<br />
"1 cc per pound."<br />
<br />
The syringe is 12 cc.<br />
<br />
"You want to get 3 syringes of peroxide down her."<br />
<br />
Induce vomiting?<br />
<br />
"Yes. It will take about 15 minutes. Then bring her in first thing in the morning for a K1 shot. If she doesn't throw up, give me a holler back."<br />
<br />
Well, no matter how tired you are, no matter how worn out, no matter how much more you think you just can't handle, when it comes to saving your "child's" life, the energy comes!<br />
<br />
I got 2 1/2 syringes of peroxide down her throat, crying with each dose and telling her what a good girl she is, holding her, and letting her know I wasn't meaning to hurt her, and within 3-4 minutes, she was vomiting all over my kitchen floor and I was happpy, so extremely happy I could hardly catch my breath.<br />
<br />
I was shocked and horrified at the amount of pellets she had ingested, some were already turning soft and beginning to digest in her system -- (Yes, I inspected the situation closely.)<br />
<br />
Well, she vomited until 1:30 in the morning, but I knew she would be okay once she got to nothing left but "bottom fluids." I waited until almost 3:00 before going to bed with her as I wanted to make sure no convulsions, that her breathing/snoring continued, etc.<br />
<br />
It's now 9:45 a.m. the morning of this ordeal. We've already been to the vet to get her K1 shot (antidote) and pills she will take for the next week. However, the amount of pellets she ate in the short time she did would have killed her in less than an hour.<br />
<br />
At time of this writing, I have no idea where she got the package from, as I thought I had them all placed securely out of the babies' reach. The only thing I can think of is that the mouse she killed had enough in its system, so Topaz got the "taste." Once she had the taste, she recognized the smell, and was persistent in getting to the least secure package of pellets within her ability. Needless to say, all packages have been picked up and thrown away -- another type of "trap" will need to be found for the mice problem, but until then they are the least of my worries.<br />
<br />
My advice to anyone reading this -- pass this story on first so that other Corgi, pet, animal owners will know what to have on hand so they can act fast -- and I mean FAST!<br />
<br />
Go to your local vet, explain to them what I went through, and purchase a 12 cc Monoject syringe to have on hand. Then go to a store and buy a bottle of Hydrogen Peroxide to keep stored close to the syringe. For less than $5, your dog's and/or cat's life may be saved within 10 minutes.<br />
<br />
Topaz is doing fine, awake and alert, barking, ate breakfast just fine, and about ready for her morning nap. She;s staying close by my side while Frankie and Dooley go on about playing and romping in the house.<br />
<br />
Getting the syringe in her mouth and forcing her to swallow the peroxide wasn't the most pleasant thing to do, but I had to. Watching her vomit was less pleasant, but she had to. All of the unpleasantries go away when you see the spark in their eye and the smile on their face after all is done, and that is the most memorable of all!