Frequently Asked Questions

   

 

   

What's New

 

Canine Influenza Information

With much discussion about human influenza (flu) it is interesting to note that there exists a canine influenza virus also. It is not transmissible to humans, but there seems to be a fair amount of confusion as to whether one should vaccinate one's dog for this problem or not. Currently we are recommending you wait on this. Please read our position on this current topic in preventive medicine...... read more

 

New Cancer Treatment Available

The Animal Hospital of Rowlett is one of just a few veterinary facilities in the United States providing this new technology in fighting cancer in pets... read more



AHR - Pet of the Month

Each month we like to highlight a special friend of Animal Hospital of Rowlett. To read more about them, just click here and select the "Pet of the Month" album in the photo gallery.

   

 

   

CurrentNews

Curious and Fascinating Animal Stories

Australian Cattle Dog Survives 6 Months on Desert Island
...read

 

Sick Sea Turtle Checks Herself into Hospital
...read

 

Vets to the stars recalls stories, lessons learned on the set
...read

 

World's largest archive of animals sounds
...read

 

Presidential Pets
...read

 

 

Full moon means more pet emergencies
...read

 

Cats Can Get Alzheimer's: Study?
...read

 

Poll: Candidates' Positions on Dog Laws Matter
...read

   

 

 

   

Don't Forget

Schedule appointments on-line

You can now schedule your routine medical appointments, or make a grooming or Pet Hotel reservation on-line. Click to Schedule an appointment

 

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Customer Satisfaction Survey

Let us know how we're doing by taking our Customer Satisfaction Survey. Click to take the survey

 

   

 

 

Frequently Asked Questions


Pet First Aid

When your pet has an emergency, being prepared is very important.

We cannot stress enough that you SHOULD NOT get on-line during a pet emergency or when your pet is seriously ill. In an emergency, first aid is not a substitute for veterinary treatment. However, before you are able to get your pet to a veterinarian, knowing some basic first aid can help. Always seek veterinary care following first-aid attempts.

 

Bite Wounds

Treatment/Action
Approach the pet carefully to avoid getting bitten. Muzzle the animal. Check the wound for contamination or debris. If significant debris is present, then clean the wound with large amounts of saline or balanced electrolyte solution. If these are not available, then regular water may be used. Wrap large open wounds to keep them clean. Apply pressure to profusely bleeding wounds. Do not use a tourniquet. Wear gloves when possible.

Bite wounds often become infected and need professional care. Call your veterinarian.

 

Bleeding

Treatment/Action
Apply firm, direct pressure over the bleeding area until the bleeding stops. Hold the pressure for at least 10 straight minutes (continually releasing the pressure to check the wound will hamper the clotting). Avoid bandages that cut off circulation.

Call your veterinarian immediately.

 

Breathing Stops

Treatment/Action
Check to see if the animal is choking on a foreign object. If an animal is not breathing, place it on a firm surface with its left side up. Check for a heartbeat by listening at the area where the elbow touches the chest. If you hear a heartbeat but not breathing, close the animal's mouth and breathe directly into its nose--not the mouth--until the chest expands. Repeat 12 to 15 times per minute. If there is no pulse, apply heart massage at the same time. The heart is located in the lower half of the chest, behind the elbow of the front left leg. Place one hand below the heart to support the chest. Place other hand over the heart and compress gently. To massage the hearts of cats and other tiny pets, compress the chest with the thumb and forefingers of one hand. Apply heart massage 80-120 times per minute for larger animals and 100-150 per minute for smaller ones. Alternate heart massage with breathing.

Please note: Even in the hands of well-trained veterinary health professionals, the success of resuscitation is very low overall. Success may be slightly higher in the cases of drowning or electrical shock.

Call your veterinarian immediately.

 

Burns(chemical, electrical, or heat including from a heating pad)

Symptoms: singed hair, blistering, swelling, redness of skin
Treatment/Action
Flush the burn immediately with large amounts of cool, running water. Apply an ice pack for 15-20 minutes. Do not place an ice pack directly on the skin. Wrap the pack in a light towel or other cover. If the animal has large quantities of dry chemicals on its skin, brush them off. Water may activate some dry chemicals.

Call your veterinarian immediately.

 

Choking

Symptoms: difficulty breathing, excessive pawing at the mouth, blue lips and tongue
Treatment/Action
Be sure to protect yourself as well as the animal, as the pet will likely be frantic and may be more likely to bite. If the pet can still partially breathe, it's best to keep the animal calm and get to a veterinarian as quickly as possible. Look into the mouth to see if foreign object in throat is visible. If you can, clear the airway by removing the object with pliers or tweezers, being careful not to push it farther down the throat. If it is lodged too deep or if the pet collapses, then place your hands on both sides of the animal's rib cage and apply firm, quick pressure. Or place the animal on its side and strike the side of the rib cage firmly with the palm of your hand three or four times. Repeat this procedure until the object is dislodged or you arrive at the veterinarian's office.

Call your veterinarian immediately.

 

Diarrhea

Treatment/Action
Withhold food for 12-24 hours, but not water. Sometimes pets that appear to be straining are sore from diarrhea rather than from constipation. Your veterinarian can help you decide which it is and what will help. Trying at-home treatments without knowing the real cause can just make things worse.

Call your veterinarian.

 

Fractures

Symptoms: Pain, inability to use a limb, or limb at odd angle
Treatment/Action
Muzzle the pet and look for bleeding. If you can control bleeding without causing more injury, then do so. Watch for signs of shock. DO NOT TRY TO SET THE FRACTURE by pulling or tugging on the limb. Transport the pet to the veterinarian immediately, supporting the injured part as best you can.

 

Heatstroke

Symptoms: Rapid or labored breathing, vomiting, high body temperature, collapse
Treatment/Action
Place the animal in a tub of cool water. Or, gently soak the animal with a garden hose or wrap it in a cool, wet towel. Do not overcool the animal. Stop cooling when rectal temperature reaches 103 degrees Fahrenheit.

Call veterinarian immediately.

 

Poisoning

Symptoms: vomiting, convulsions, diarrhea, salivation, weakness, depression, pain
Treatment/Action
Record what the pet ingested and how much. Immediately call your veterinarian or poison control center. Do not induce vomiting. In case of toxins or chemicals on the skin from oils, paints, insecticides and other contact irritants, request directions on if and how to wash the toxin off.

 

Seizures

Symptoms: salivation, loss of control of urine or stool, violent muscle twitching, loss of consciousness
Treatment/Action
Move the pet away from any objects that could be harmful during the seizure. Use a blanket for padding and protection. Do not put yourself at risk by restraining the pet during the seizure. Time the seizure. They usually last only 2 to 3 minutes. Afterwards, keep the animal calm and quiet.

Call your veterinarian immediately.

 

Shock

Symptoms: irregular breathing, dilated pupils
Treatment/Action
Shock may occur as a result of a serious injury or fright. Keep the animal gently restrained, quiet, and warm, with the lower body elevated.

Call your veterinarian immediately.

 

Vomiting

Treatment/Action
Withhold food for 12-24 hours. Give the pet ice cubes for two hours after vomiting stops, then slowly increase the amount of water and foods given over a 24-hour period.

Call your veterinarian.

 

If you need to muzzle your pet
Use a strip of soft cloth, rope, necktie, or nylon stocking. Wrap around the nose, under the chin and tie behind the ears. Care must be taken when handling weak or injured pets. Even normally docile pets will bite when in pain. Allow the pet to pant after handling by loosening or removing the muzzle. Do not use a muzzle in a case of vomiting. Cats and small pets may be difficult to muzzle. A towel placed around the head will help control small pets.

If your pet can't walk
A door, board, blanket, or floor mat can be used as a stretcher to transport injured or weak animals.

If your pet's emergency is not covered here, please call your veterinarian immediately. If you are away from home, you can find a veterinarian near you by using the AAHA-accredited hospital directory.

 

Ask the Vet

 


Animal News

Curious and Fascinating Animal Stories

Vets to the stars recalls stories, lessons learned on the set


One might think life as a veterinarian to animal stars would be filled with glamour and excitement. But Dr. Jim Peddie says it's really filled with 747s full of hay and tubs of Pepto Bismol.

Veterinarians Peddie and his wife, Linda, know these stories of a veterinarian's life behind the movies scenes all too well. The couple, both graduates of the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine Class of 1965, worked for about 15 years with Holly-wood's animal actors.

They cared for the stars of 68 feature films, including "Dances With Wolves," "Operation Dumbo Drop" and "Evan Almighty," as well as 27 television series like "Frasier" and "Full House."

And as for visions of lounging on sets, hobnobbing with celebrities, Peddie laughs off the notion, saying the work wasn't always pretty, but it was always satisfying.

"If your job is a veterinarian, you don't get on set a lot. They'll call you and say while they were working with this animal, something happened that they are concerned about," Peddie says, explaining most of the calls he got were from animal handlers and trainers after hours, once the animals were back home for the day. "You'll work 24 hours a day."

One time he remembers being called to a set to deal with a case of "explosive diarrhea" that hit an elephant that was supposed to appear as though it were on water skis.

The Peddies have done a lot of work with elephants, he says, speaking lovingly of one patient he calls "a human in an elephant suit." The elephant named Thai has starred in films like "George of the Jungle" and "Operation Dumbo Drop." Thai's overseas role in "Operation Dumbo Drop," however, presented Peddie with one of his biggest medical challenges. While in Thailand for filming, without Peddie, the animal got very sick and wouldn't eat, he says. Trying to make his diagnosis from a half a world away, Peddie finally decided that Thai must not have liked the local vegetation she was being fed and maybe had a slight infection from the native water.

The more difficult aspect of the case came with the solution, though — how to get an elephant's diet overseas. In the end, Thai ended up drinking — 150 to 200 gallons a day — and bathing in bottled water, and Peddie chartered a 747, which he filled with hay.

One of the easiest parts of the job — much different from the life of a small-or mixed-animal veterinarian — is dealing with clients, he says. "The owner and trainer are usually the same person. They raised these animals from birth. You've developed this understanding with the animal," Peddie says. "The animals are family to these people. One of the neat things about doing film work was we worked with humans who had the animal's interest as their highest priority and that made an awful lot of decisions that a practitioner has to face nonexistent. It was never an issue of what to spend."

When he and his wife began taking care of the animals at Universal Studios' city walk section in 1991 at the request of the animal training company Birds and Animals Unlimited, they "broke into the inner circle" of Hollywood and started being contacted for work by all the major studios, Peddie says. Health problems have forced Peddie to cut back drastically on his film work, but he says many of the owners and trainers became personal friends and he still cares for their animals.

 

Sick Sea Turtle Checks Herself into Hospital
A sick sea turtle navigated itself to just the right place, at the right time: the dock of Turtle Hospital, a nonprofit in the Florida Keys dedicated to helping sea turtles. The lucky turtle's move — by chance or not — is already being hailed by the center as "by far the easiest rescue to date."... more

 

Australian Cattle Dog Survives 6 Months on Desert Island
Sophie Tucker, an Australian cattle dog, spent much of her first four years lounging around inside an air-conditioned house in Queensland, Australia. So when she went overboard last November, her owners Jan and David Griffith assumed she quickly drowned in rough seas. But Sophie was a survivor: She swam five nautical miles (about six miles), landing on St. Bee’s Island in the Great Barrier Reef and living on crabs, goats and koalas... more

 

World's largest archive of animals sounds
Even wondered what a rufous-sided Towhee sounds like? The Macauley Library of Natural Sounds at Cornell University has the answer. It house the world's largest archive of animals sounds - more than 160,000 audio and video recordings of birds, insects, fish, frogs and mammals. To hear a free recording of Rufous-sided Towhees and other birds, go to www.birds.cornell.edu/macaulaylibrary.

 

Presidential Pets
Past presidential pets include Martin Van Buren's 2 tiger cubs, John Quincy Adam's alligator, and Calvin Coolidge's pygmy hippopotomus, Billy.

 

Full moon means more pet emergencies
When the Moon is Full, so is Veterinary Emergency Room
When the full moon rises, dogs and cats go wild - and get hurt. Dogs and cats suffering heart attacks, seizures and trauma end up at Colorado State University's Veterinary Medical Center emergency room in higher numbers around the full moon, according to a new study.

 

Female Komodo Dragon Has Virgin Births
Maybe females could live without males, at least for Komodo dragons. These behemoths of the reptile world can produce babies without fertilization by a male, scientists recently discovered...

 

Cats Can Get Alzheimer's: Study?
Cats can develop a feline form of Alzheimer's disease, say U.K. and U.S. researchers who identified a protein that can build up in brain nerve cells and cause mental deterioration ...

 

Poll: Candidates' Positions on Dog Laws Matter
A whopping 98.6 percent of dog owners said that a candidate's position or track record on dog-related laws and policy would influence their vote in a local or state election, according to a poll whose results were released Oct. 30...
















 
   
   
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