Showing posts with label heat stroke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heat stroke. Show all posts

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Summer Tips To Keep Your Pets Cool



This poster was found on Twitter. It remind us all of some very important dangers pets face in summertime.

I thought it would be a good springboard to discuss some of the things I see happening to my patients.

It is always my hope that through other peoples experiences, accidents, and story that maybe we can avoid it happening to you.

Related Posts;
Fourth Of July

Signs Of Heat Intolerance

Death By Accident, Hyperthermia

Keep Cool Through The Dog Days Of Summer

If you have a pet question or want to share your pets life, your love for them, or be a friend to another pet in need please find us on Pawbly.com.

You can also find me at the clinic, Jarrettsville Vet, or on Twitter @FreePetAdvice. I am happy to help you and your pet in any way I can.

Be safe out there, and have the best summer ever!

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Keep Cool Through the Dog Days of Summer

It's another hot and humid day here in Southern Pennsylvania! A great opportunity to remind everyone to keep cool and stay safe.

For our pets there are some quick tips to keeping your kids healthy and out of the veterinary hospital!

Here are my pet tips:

1. Remember that pets have a limited ability to remove excess heat.

Pets have a limited ability to remove excess heat. To cool off they will pant.



When a pet gets hot they will start to slow down. The key is to not encourage them to overheat once they start to get hot. For puppies, thick bodied dogs, and brachycephalic dogs (short nosed dogs, like bulldogs) if they start to get hot they have a limited ability to cool down even when they stop their activity. For these dogs if they start to look hot it is time to get proactive and prepare for heat intolerance, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke. Get to an emergency room if your dog appears to be hot and heading into heat exhaustion.

A pet heading into heat exhaustion is panting rapidly and slowing down their responsiveness to the world around them. They will pant, sit down, then lie down, then look lethargic. If you see this take their temperature! If it is greater than 103 degrees place them in a wet towel and drive immediately to the emergency room! I have seen many dogs arrive at our clinic at 103 degrees and even with aggressive immediate emergency care their internal temperature has risen to 105 degrees within minutes!

2. Hot Cars Are Dangerous, and Can Kill. 

In my opinion this is the most under estimated potential cause of death to dogs in the summer!


Never, ever leave your pet in a car. If you do need to bring your pet with you then have someone stay in the car with them! It is almost impossible for you to understand how hot it gets and how fast it gets there. But can you imagine anything worse than suffocating in an inferno? Never risk it. Leave your pet at home in the A/C.



Poster For Caring For Pets In Hot Weather

3. Give pets free access to a shady cool spot.


Most pets that have free access to a quiet shady cool spot will seek it out on the hot days.

Can you see Charlie?




Dense foliage provides an umbrella of shade that keeps the ground moist and is also a safe place to rest.

A gerbi-gloo.


4. Keep lots of Fresh Water Available.

The most vital part of avoiding dehydration is adequate water intake. You can encourage drinking by providing a big clean bowl of fresh water, or a fountain. In the summer the bowl should be cleaned and refilled daily. This should also be kept in the shade.


5. Keep your pet well groomed. 

A matted coat cannot breathe and creates an environment where hot spots and skin infections can start. Worse, yet, if the coat is matted the flies will find the infection, bite to create a wound, and before you know it your pet will have maggots. (Bleck!)

This is my Savannah with her summer shave down.

6. Keep Summer Activities Quiet and Calm in the Heat of the Day.


A cool brick walkway.
A few things to mention about cats in the hot summer.
Outside cats will find a small dark quiet place, and sleep through the heat of the day. There is great concern for overheating in cats that are in enclosed places or if they are sick or elderly.

Inside cats will seek a fan, or A/C to keep cool.

A cat that is over heated will become quiet, still, and pant. Open mouth breathing in cats occurs when they are stressed or too hot. If a cat gets too hot they should be brought to an emergency hospital. It is imperative to take their temperature. An overheated pet can be cooled by placing them in cool (not cold!) water, shaving their armpits and ventrum, or immersing them in a cool bath..but as we all know, not too many cats like water, and a hot pet should not be stressed unnecessarily.

A comfy chair and a relaxed pup.

These are my pups, in our cool, dark, breezy hallway.

Or take a mid-afternoon nap,,in the A/C, of course.

 7. Let Your Pet Find a Spot They are Comfortable In.


"Oh, the tiles are sooo cool!" Zzzzzz.

My little Oriole, on her perch, and very obviously relaxed.

Little Tootsie, who never shies from a snooze on the tiles to stay cool.Tootsie's story.


Wren loves our wood floors to stretch out on.

Jekyl and Charlie in the cool kitchen.

Puppies tend to be a little warmer than adult dogs.
So if they get hot they will seek a cool place.
Our clinic ceramic tiles hit the hot spot!


8. Adjust Summertime Activities.


Exercise your pet in the very early morning and late evening when the temperature is cooler and the humidity is lower. Do not over exert your pet regardless of time of day.

Try a walk in the stream, or a visit to the lake, or the ocean. If water is not in your locale then try a kids pool, a sprinkler, or a hose! Lots of pets love the water.

Minnie in her pool.




A late afternoon stroll in the pond and stream.

Nothing beats the beach during the steamy days of summer!




For more information on overheating in pets.



Any sick, old, or immune compromised pet should be kept indoors and avoid the stress that a hot day causes.


There are a few products available to help keep pets cool.

Water cooled blankets.



Water cooled jackets.



If you have any questions, or comments, or things to add to this blog please leave me a comment. Or you can find me @pawbly on Twitter, or anytime at Pawbly.com, where pet questions are answered for free by any of our talented group.

Have a wonderful and safe summer everyone!

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Caring for Pets in Hot Weather Poster

This poster was forwarded from a good friend.

I think it does a great job of putting the pets clinical signs into a very informal understandable format.



For my blogs on heat intolerance; http://tinyurl.com/8rrbgk4
Death by heat; http://tinyurl.com/9yo85s6

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

The Signs of Heat Intolerance

I wrote about the loss of Ruby from heat stroke/hyperthermia the other day, and because it's another 100 plus degree day here in the Mid-Atlantic I thought I would add another aspect to the topic.

The best way to stay cool, inside, relaxed and comfortable.
I thought I would share my own experience with heat intolerance just to help you understand who is at risk, what signs to look for, and how to treat for the early signs, and when it's time to get help.

It has been a very hot summer here already, and it's only mid-July. I am on the MD-PA border and there was almost two weeks of above 100 degree days. Compound that with the very high humidity and the outside turns into a place that no man or beast should be.

Try telling that to my 3 year old beagle Jekyl. It is almost impossible to keep that dog inside. I thought it would be a great idea to train him to ring the bells on the door when he wanted to go outside. Little did I realize that he would ring them constantly. I have become his butler.

He feels compelled to be outside in the front yard, sitting on the little knoll, head and nose to the horizon, scanning for a reason to sound the alarm. Hhe howls if there is any hint of any kind of intruder, ghost, mammal, or automobile. If you call "guard dog" any canine that howls at everything then he deserves a very large trophy. He is obsessed. What did I think I would get?

The only time he will put his OCD tendencies aside is if it is raining. The rest of the time he is on duty.

Since it has been so hot I have had to restrict his outside time to short quick visits. Every time I bring him in, he rings the bells until I let him out. (Yes, I have resorted to yelling reprimands, and, yes, he ignores me).

He came in the other day after a short 10 minute trip outside and immediately lay down on the wood floor. He was panting, tongue lashing about with the excessive respiration's, with fully extended front and back legs, and laying on his side. He was huffing and puffing and exhausted.

I looked at his gums, (red), and felt for his pulses (rapid). He was also warm to the touch.

At this point I would tell all of you to go grab your thermometer out of your in-home emergency kit,
(WHAT!? You don't have one? Please see my blog for emergency kits at http://tinyurl.com/cv2vmt2 ()and tell you to check the temperature.

OK, to be honest I skipped the thermometer step. (I am going to claim professional privilege). BUT, if you take a temp and it is above 103 degrees (normal for a pet is 100-102.5) then please head directly to your vets office. Once a pet starts to heat up it is often very difficult to reverse it. At 104 degrees I am ALWAYS placing an i.v. catheter and running i.v. fluids. I just don't think that there is any better way to cool a pet then with i.v. fluids. Also once your temp starts to fall stop cooling. I have had lots of pets go from 104 to 103, to 98 in a matter of a few minutes. We also check the temperature every 10 minutes or so as we are cooling.(We keep a chart with a timer to help us keep track).


Jekyl when he first got inside.


Fully extended and flat-out.
This is his way of trying to maximize his cooling efforts.

I grabbed Jekyl and carried him up to the bathtub. He is very familiar with the tub. He hates it. Besides his annoying pestering tendency to "ring the bell" he also has an equally annoying although much more offensive, tendency to roll in the excrement of dead, dying, decaying, and disgusting things. They are too disgusting to mention. I think it is groundhog poop, but really I haven't gone to investigate. Whatever it is, from whatever source it leached out of, it is pungent.The kind of pungent that when you open the door you know before he sets foot in the house that it's bath time. He has had his smelly butt drug up to the bath tub more than any pet who leads as cushioned a life as he does. He is the cleanest beagle in the state. He hates that too.

I put him in the tub and ran the water on cool. It is very important to use cool vs. cold water. Cold water actually causes peripheral vaso-constriction and will slow down the cooling.





I know it looks silly but my leg is actually keeping him sitting in the tub.
He needed the cool water on his belly.



Should you ever find your pet panting, lethargic, open mouth rapidly breathing (I call this panting), or even worse non-responsive take your pet immediately to the vet or ER facility. Fast emergency care can save lives.

Jekyl cooled off quickly. I kept him wet and let him lie back on the cool floor. Needless to say I ignored his requests to be let back outside the rest of the day.



He is bad, but he is still soo cute!

One of the reasons that Jekyl is susceptible to heat intolerance is his size. He is a short thick stocky boy. When he heats up he heats up quicker, and when he tries to cool down it takes longer. The thicker, stockier dogs must be closely watched. The brachycephalic breeds (short, squishy-faced dogs like Bulldogs) need to be watched even closer. Keep your pets inside on hot days, keep them cool with lots of fresh water, and never leave or tie them outside. And most importantly please never leave them in a car.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Death By Accident

Yesterday our evening appointments were interrupted by a woman rushing into the clinc carrying in a white collie mix who was flat out. She was hysterical and her three young half-clothed boys followed like ducklings in tow.

When she erupted into the front doors her shrieking turned into a full exam room of screaming. The receptionists were frantically yelling, the waiting clients were awestruck, and then joined the bellowing, and even though I was only half-way through my examination with a client I too joined in on the hysteria. I literally dropped my papers, ditched the exam, and high tailed it (despite the receptionists screams to "RUN!") behind the congo line parade of delirium. It was pandemonium, and all the neighbors knew.

A very young, intact, long white haired Shepherd mix was placed on the surgery table. He was lifeless, but still breathing. He seemed to be entering a comatose state and I knew the minute that I saw his bright red-purple gums and the slightly watered down blood pouring from his rectum that he was a heat stroke victim. As I started to take his temperature the first number that flashed onto the digital read-out was 106. Within 2 seconds it beeped at its max read out of 108 degrees. I told the 3 techs scrambling for equipment that he was a hyperthermia and that he was likely going to die.

Terrible, cold, short, words to hear. But I knew that surviving 108 plus degrees internal body temp was physiologically impossible.

We immediately transferred him to the dental table so we could start hosing him off with water. I reminded the staff to use "cool" vs "cold" water because ice-cold water on an already way over heated animal causes the vasculature on the skin's surface to vaso-constrict and stop blood flow, therefore arresting the cooling process.

I then knew that I had to very quickly go out to talk to the family.

Three boys under age 10 flocked to me like I was some sort of relief aid worker. They were all in summer shorts, no shoes, and no shirts. It appeared that their dogs discovery had occurred mid- afternoon summer play time. Their mom, also in summer pool attire, was crying uncontrollably and kept asking me.

I asked the receptionist to sit in the exam room with the boys while I took mom across the hall to discuss Rudy's condition.

"How did this happen?" she asked.

As much as I didn't have a spare second to try to console her in her grief-ridden confusion I tried to explain hurriedly that Rudy was very hot, and that I needed to know if she wanted me to start emergency treatment measures on him.  although his internal core temperature was above what I could record and that I feared he was too hot to be saved.

She replied "Yes," in a momentary lapse of tears gurgling and incomprehensible babble.

She asked me, "What happened?" and I wanted to pick her up and shake her. It was my honest first response. How could she not know what happened? How did she expect me to know?

I replied back to her, "Ruby has gotten too hot. His internal body temperature does not even register. He is above 108 degrees and I am afraid he is going to die." I had no time for platitudes, and there were 3 techs in the back treatment area and her dying dog who needed me immediately.

She started to mutter something to the effect of "we only left him tied out for two hours..."

It was a 100 plus degrees outside and I was going to say things I would regret and Ruby was going to die if I didn't leave.

I ran to the back and we started to try to reverse the series of life-ending steps that his body had already started.

One tech was still hosing him down. To the touch he was almost completely soaked now.

The other two techs were trying to place peripheral i.v. catheters in his front leg.

I barked out orders as fast as I could. Ruby needed an i.v. catheter in each front leg and fluids as fast as we could deliver them.

My staff is incredibly competent and every technician in the building can place an i.v. catheter within seconds. Multiple attempts at light speed and they still didn't have one catheter in. They stopped their attempts and moved over so I could jump in.

He had no blood pressure, no palpable veins, and hence they had had no success in placing the catheter.

Because he was so hot his blood had already started to condense. They were expecting to see a "flashback" of blood when the catheter entered the vein, but he was too hot for the blood to "flash."  He was a patient with blood vessels like they hadn't seen before and their idea of normal was prohibiting them from believing that their catheters were in the vein. As I advanced the catheter there was only a teeny tiny drop of blood to flash. They were expecting his vein to be the normal tube like liquid-blood filled structure that healthy pets have. But he was no longer a normal healthy pet. I quickly taped the first i.v. in and moved to the other leg.

The other leg was so difficult that I had to do what we call a "cut-down." The vein was so small, so obscure, and so damaged that I had to cut through the skin to dissect the vein out so I could then try to place the i.v. catheter. It is a procedure we only do when everything else has failed and we are up against a wall. I placed the second i.v. and we started to push fluids as fast as we could.

"The fluids won't run," they reported to me as quickly as they started to squeeze the i.v. bags.

The veins were blowing because the "tube" of the vein had been heated up to a point where the tube broke down. Not only were the walls of the tubes breaking down, but the liquid-blood inside of them was no a jello-like consistency. He had essentially evaporated off the liquid and congealed his own blood. Both legs i.v. catheters were blown as quickly as we had started to push the i.v. fluids.

Within minutes of cool water cooling his temperature registered at 106.5. It was better than >108, but he was failing, and all of our attempts to save him were too.

He then started to seize. I tried to give an emergency valium dose to stop the seizure but seconds after the seizure started his heart started to beat irregularly.

At this point I looked at my staff. They were begging me to save him, and gazing at me as if I had some magical powers to stop and reverse time.

I said to them again "I am sorry, I think he is going to die."

I looked at Ruby and I said, "I am sorry."

His heart changed from too slow, during his seizure, to wildly erratically irregularly fast. He was in atrial fibrillation now. I grabbed for more drugs. His eyes opened, his head flew back, the pupils went fixed and dilated, and his mouth gaped open as if to release a harboring demon.

The techs begged me to put him down. One grabbed for the euthanasia solution as I wrapped my hand around the area of his chest where I could feel his dying bewildered heart take its last few beats.

As he took his last breath I pierced his heart with the pink fluid to relieve his struggle. He died before the fluid could assist him.

It had been less than 20 minutes and we had all witnessed what we all collectively agreed was the most excruciatingly horrible death.

I returned to the family to notify them of Ruby's passing. The boys, who had not seemed upset before, now screamed in a charged guttural grief stricken cry. Their mom held them and tried to comfort them. I could tell that she wasn't going to let herself cry while she stayed strong for her children.

The rest of the family arrived a little while later. I spoke to all of the adults together.

They didn't understand that 2 hours was likely an hour and 50 minutes longer than any dog could tolerate in 100 plus degree very high humidity heat. They told me that they never tie him up, but because the kids were out playing, and because Ruby was trying to corral them up, they had tied him to a bush. He had been jumping and barking and when they found him he was collapsed under the bush.

I tried to explain that dogs are about 2 degrees warmer than humans are, they wear a fur coat all year around, and that they have a very limited ability to sweat.

Ruby's death was a terrible tragic accident and my only hope is that his story will save other pets out there somewhere.

Please never leave your pets outside in hot weather. NEVER EVER leave them in a car. And if they start to pant its time to get them wet and cool them off.

Any pet over 103 degrees needs to go to a vet immediately!

My thoughts and prayers are with Rudy's family.



I saw this online recently. It is a petition at change.org.

It’s a sight that makes Dorothy Hearst desperately worried every summer: a car parked at a shopping center, a dog looking anxiously out the window, and no owner in sight.
Dorothy never leaves Emmi, a 3-year-old Labrador whom she adores, in her Subaru -- as a lifelong dog lover, she knows that in the few minutes it takes to run an errand, the temperature in a car can soar to almost 110 degrees. But many people don’t realize that even a 15 minute errand can be fatal for their beloved pets.
For Dorothy, it’s heartbreaking. And what’s worse is knowing it can happen to even the most loving owners -- people simply don’t realize the danger. Dorothy knows that educating people would save the lives of countless dogs. That’s why she’s started a petition asking Subaru, which prides itself on its dog-friendly image, to make an ad warning drivers not to leave their dogs in the car during the summer.
As a Subaru driver, Dorothy appreciates all the ways the company has already shown it cares about dogs -- and she loves its popular "Dog Tested, Dog Approved" ads showing dogs test driving its cars with hilarious results. This summer, she thinks Subaru can use these creative ads to send an important message about the dangers of hot cars -- and save the lives of hundreds of dogs.
Subaru says 70% of its customers are pet owners, and Dorothy thinks this makes them the ideal voice for such an important, dog-friendly message. She's convinced that Subaru will jump at the chance to appeal not only to its own customers, but to dog lovers everywhere -- and she knows that this is one of the most powerful ways to make sure this summer, more dogs don’t die needlessly.** ask Subaru to save dogs’ lives by making an ad warning owners not to leave their dogs in the car this summer.
Thanks for being a change-maker, via Change.org see Dorothies petition.


The signing period for this petition has closed. You can notify Subaru yourself via their link at  https://www.subaru.com/shopping-tools/contact-us.html. Wouldn't it be nice if there was a way for automobiles to detect if a pet or person was in the car? It will happen someday.


For more information on the dangers of pets in cars see; http://www.petmd.com/dog/emergency/common-emergencies/e_dg_heat_stroke