Keeping Your Dog Healthy

Your dog’s health is important to us.  Below are useful tips for keeping your dog healthy, as well as information on diseases and preventative care for your pet.

Dogs Health

Puppy’s First Wellness Visit

A veterinarian should perform a thorough physical examination within 48 hours of purchase or adoption. Immunizations might include Distemper, Hepatitis, Leptospirosis, Parvovirus, Rabies, Influenza, and Bordetella. A series of vaccinations is required to build immunity. Your puppy must be 6-8 weeks of age before this series of immunizations is started. After vaccination, he may be sore for the rest of the day. If so, place him in a warm room, offer food and water, and let him sleep. Do not give aspirin, ibuprofen, or Tylenol. These human medications can be fatal.

Read more about puppy’s first wellness visit.

Training Your Puppy

Puppies are extremely impressionable. How you train, play, and behave around your puppy will have long lasting effects.  The training and socialization that he receives in his first 14 weeks will impact him for the rest of his life. You can make him a better pet and prevent many behavior problems by following a few guidelines.

Read more about training your puppy.

Post-Natal Care for Puppies

Very little care is required of the owner for puppies during the first few weeks after birth.  Instinct causes the mother to provide for most needs of her offspring. The best advice is to leave the new family alone as much as possible and simply watch for anything you feel might be abnormal. Ensure that the puppies are nursed within the first six (6) hours following birth. This provides antibodies that the puppies need to fight disease for the first 6-8 weeks of life. These antibodies are only absorbed during the first few hours after birth.

Read more about post-natal care for puppies.

Dogs Health: Post-Natal Care

Pregnancy and nursing are major stressors to your pet. We recommend a post-birth physical examination and any necessary treatment within 24 hours of delivery. We will be happy to answer any questions you may have at that time.

Read more about post-natal care for nursing moms. 

Dogs Health: Heartworm Facts

  • Adult Heartworms live in the right side of the heart.
  • They are 6-14 inches long, and several hundred may be present in an infected dog!
  • Heartworms impair blood circulation, resulting in damage to the heart, lungs, liver, and kidneys. Serious damage may occur, before outward clinical signs are present.
  • Advanced signs include difficulty breathing, coughing, tiring easily, exercise intolerance, listlessness, loss of weight, and syncope (fainting).
  • Heartworms are found in all 50 states.

Read more about Heartworm Facts

Infectious Bronchitis “Kennel Cough”

Dogs cough for many reasons.  Many pets develop a harsh, deep cough after changes in the environment. This may be associated with time away from home, weather changes, boarding, visits to the dog park, or even a visit to the groomer.

Read more about Infectious Bronchitis.

Parvovirus

Canine Parvovirus is a viral disease of dogs. Parvovirus is capable of causing two different sets of clinical problems. The first to be recognized, and most common, is the intestinal form, which is manifested by diarrhea (often bloody), vomiting, loss of appetite, depression, fever, and sometimes death. The second syndrome, the cardiac form, occurs in very young pups and is manifested by an acute inflammation of the heart muscle.

Any age, breed or sex of dog can be infected with Parvovirus, but infection does not automatically mean illness. Several factors such as age, environment, stress, parasites and general health status of each individual dog infected could affect the severity of illness. The degree of illness could range from unapparent to very severe, often resulting in death. The disease is usually more severe in young dogs (less than 6 months of age).

Read more about Parvovirus.

Dogs Health: Dental Hygiene

About 75% of all dental problems serious enough to be seen by a veterinarian, (and almost all teeth lost), are the result of periodontal disease. It is the cause of 95% of all cases of “bad breath”, and affects 80- 85% of dogs and cats over the age of 3. In advanced cases, it results in infected, foul-smelling, loosened teeth; with a massive, unsightly accumulation of tartar. Often there is a loss of appetite due to painful gums. Even signs such as diarrhea, vomiting and irritability may be the result of this disease.

Read more about dental hygiene for dogs.

Managing Your Senior Dogs Health

Optimum health care can add years to your dog’s life as well as substantially decrease your cost of treating medical problems associated with aging. We would make the following recommendations:

Comprehensive Physical Examinations:
Since pets age 5-7 times faster than humans, it can be estimated that one yearly physical examination for a pet is equivalent to one exam every 5-7 years in humans. The exam should include a very detailed medical history along with a “nose to tail” physical examination. In later years, a comprehensive physical examination should be performed at least every 6 months depending on any specific medical problems present in your pet.

Laboratory Screening for Diseases:
Many medical problems can be diagnosed through the use of laboratory diagnostic testing long before clinical signs of disease become evident. Specific recommendations for your dog may include:

  • Heartworm Testing
  • Urinalysis
  • Complete Blood Counts
  • Internal Parasite Examination
  • Blood Chemistry Screening
  • Thyroid Screening

Read more about your senior dogs health.