|
Health and nutrition How to feed a Wolfdog, information about dog food, how to vaccinate and what to do if the dog gets ill.... |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
10-06-2010, 18:24 | #1 |
Member
|
Poisoning
My Elsa almost died recently. She escaped my yard the day before I came home and found her half dead. Her water was dumped, so at first I thought she was severely dehydrated. Then out came melena, which sent me into a "state of emergency" ignoring all forms of law enforcement and anyone else in my path towards the ER. I have all the analysis results and would like to discuss with anyone who is familiar with canine toxins (or has had something similar happen to them) about the possibility of this being intentional. The doctors said it was not rat poison. Her kidneys were failing; she was not suffocating... It wasn't antifreeze. The miracle workers at "Villa Felice" deserve recognition for saving her! My vet said she would probably not make it through that first night.
|
10-06-2010, 20:46 | #2 |
ir Brukne
|
Oh my god, this is really horrible How is she now?
Not long time ago here in Vilnius some dogs got poisoned by... phosphorus This is what vets said, nobody knows about the form of it that was used Wish your girl the best and to recover as soon as possible. |
10-06-2010, 21:44 | #3 |
Member
|
Elsa
She Is better. She recovered rather quickly! I just want to find out if my results look like someone else's who has had an intentional poisoning. There are so many things including plants which are poisonous....It is hard to tell.
Last edited by AMERICANI; 10-06-2010 at 21:48. |
10-06-2010, 21:50 | #4 | |
ir Brukne
|
Quote:
Have any angry neighbours?... Sorry, maybe I am too suspicious but this sounds like doing it on purpose. |
|
10-06-2010, 22:07 | #5 |
Member
|
Plants
When Ecaterina was a puppy, she was eating these little yellow flowers (in my yard) which stopped her blood from clotting, but the vet noticed it and we stopped it before it became a big problem. Two weeks later, my friend at the nearby motorcycle shop asked me how my dog was, because he saw a car hit her..... he caught her and put her back inside my yard because she was walking. I noticed her nose had some blood coming out. I thought she fell from my carport.
|
10-06-2010, 22:38 | #6 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 847
|
I think you mean these little yellow flowers
http://www.botanikus.de/Gift/schoellkraut.html but I bet an adulte CsW doesn´t eat them. Best wishes to Elsa. |
11-06-2010, 14:46 | #7 |
Member
|
poisonous plants
The vet actually said it was 'Ruta', a rather abundant plant here.... I am with you though, I don't think she escaped and ate a stomach full of "Ruta"...
|
11-06-2010, 15:32 | #8 | |
ir Brukne
|
Quote:
Really strange... How much could she eat? These plants are very common in Lithuania, grown near houses, even the places where children play, it is used as a herb - in old times - for making abortions , it also cures the nerve system And can make ones skin more sensitive to sun. It can not poison dogs. |
|
11-06-2010, 16:31 | #9 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 847
|
Surprise, surprise ... good knowledge for a "miescionka", Vaiva
but "skin more sensitive for sun" is an other herb Change your vet, Jason No dog would eat "Ruta". It smells strangely and tastes bitter. Last edited by Angelika; 11-06-2010 at 16:41. |
11-06-2010, 16:37 | #10 | |
ir Brukne
|
Quote:
Angelika, the juice of the leaves togeher with the sun makes real injurues. We tried it at the kindergarden more than twenty years ago |
|
11-06-2010, 17:06 | #11 | |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 847
|
No, your language is unfortunately too difficult for me.
Quote:
(thought you meant perhaps common St.-John´s-wort). |
|
11-06-2010, 17:17 | #12 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 847
|
Jason, I think Elsa had some grass, treated with herbicide. Or there is a "dog-hater" in your town who prepares ... something.
|
11-06-2010, 17:18 | #13 | |
ir Brukne
|
Quote:
AMERICANI, I keep thinking about a very dangerous but a very popular plant - it's latin name is Ricinus communis Don't they grow around?... Their seeds are so nice, but so poisonous... (they write 6 seeds are deadly amount for children...) |
|
11-06-2010, 17:53 | #14 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 847
|
|
12-06-2010, 14:03 | #15 | |
Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 472
|
Quote:
first, I´m very sorry for your loss - hoping that your Elsa will recover really soon. Concerning your question...please descibe the symptoms more closely, that may help to figure out whether it was a plant/herb or poisening by intention. Nevertheless, you live in Italia, that´s right? I´ve learnd that in some parts of Italy it is not that uncommon that people lay out/throw poisened meat balls or stomaches of smaller vertebra filled with a mixture of strychnine and locally used pestizites. The Problem is that many Vets cannot help an animal who ate one of these as it is difficult to figure out what exactly has been mixed into them. Strychnine itself is quite common poison used even by "hunters" in at least one part of Italia. Many dogs die that way....which is horrible! Which Region do you live in? regards, koboldine
__________________
Kein Mensch darf mir meine Schwächen so deutlich zeigen, wie meine (Wolfs-)Hunde es tun. |
|
13-06-2010, 21:22 | #16 |
Member
|
Italia
I live in the Campania Region.... between Caserta and Napoli.. As for describing symptoms, I came home and found her laying down. I picked her upand she stumbled and wobbled to a shady place... Late is when I saw melena and immediately stormed off to the vet's office. There she had a fever (41) but they shaved her stomach and tail and put ice packs on her.
Last edited by AMERICANI; 13-06-2010 at 21:23. Reason: spelling |
13-06-2010, 22:33 | #17 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 472
|
Hei,
I think you could check several possibilities: - can anyone throw / put some kind of "treaty" (filled with whatever a sick person has on hands which means Do you or your dog have "enemies"), than it will be impossible to trace the poison in her blood now - has it been one of the first really hot days? If so it might as well have been a sunstroke - if you walk her out in the morning may she have eaten something unseen/ unrecognised - like a bait? - has she eaten gras or herbs that morning - perhaps next to a field (my experience is that in the more rural parts peasants do not care what kind of pesticide/rodenticide they use as long as it helps) - which might have been contaminated? - have you/your family lately started to protect yourselves against gnats, biting houseflies, zecce...? There are repellenti con Dietiltoluamide which human beings use... a dog licking this might take in too much of this poisening substance. Three years ago it has been some kind of fashion sports in a regione next to your place - right up the Majella and next to the national park - to display poisened baits next to dog owners places... Hoping that you will find out that your dog has not been poisened intentionally and perhaps you will find some evidence that she knows what went wrong - and now will avoid it....Our dogs are quite special concerning this ability. ti auguro una bella serata have a nice evening koboldine
__________________
Kein Mensch darf mir meine Schwächen so deutlich zeigen, wie meine (Wolfs-)Hunde es tun. |
14-06-2010, 06:38 | #18 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Bad Dürkheim
Posts: 2,249
|
It also can be a simple infection with Clostridium or E.coli or the new parvo types on a young dog with unsufficient working vaccination.
The stumbeling and wobbling can be caused from high fever. |
14-06-2010, 17:47 | #19 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 472
|
Sorry, I don´t think that - even an italian vet (yes...I know there are such and such) - would miss to check on Clostridium/E.coli....and she isn´t that young anymore, born in 2007...
Stumbling - sure due to heat (inside or outside) is a possibility, that´s why I´ve asked for the wheather To me it sounds more ...obvious... that there are "dear neighbours" - it wouldn´t be too bad to keep the dogs inside while you are away, just for some time, and check the garden when you come home. Take care, koboldine
__________________
Kein Mensch darf mir meine Schwächen so deutlich zeigen, wie meine (Wolfs-)Hunde es tun. |
14-06-2010, 20:36 | #20 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Bad Dürkheim
Posts: 2,249
|
To check for Chlostridium and pathogenous E.coli you normally have to send a sample to a lab or do the incubation yourself. Even a non-Italian vet (strange point of view by the way) would need some time for that. Apart from time is another problem that facaessamples often don´t show the same bacterial population like the small intestins.
Only very, very few poisons cause high temperature and it is not very likely that a wolfdog will stay in the sun when having the choice till it gets such severe problems. Strychnin for example causes extreme convulsions as a main symptom. Cumarinderivates that are nowadays used in rat-poison cause melena but not higher temperature... Americani don´t you have toxicological emergency centers in Italy? In Germany you can call them, tell them the symptoms and they will tell you what poisons are a possible cause. Ina |
|
|