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Pet Health Articles
Weight Loss for Dogs
May, 2004
Written by Karyn Deveraux
The key ingredient to helping your dog lose weight is YOU! Changing your own thought patterns and habits will have the biggest impact on your dog's weight loss. Instead of dreading the process, open your mind, be creative and try to have fun! Change patterns instead of setting up a regime. Retrain yourself, and your dog's health will follow.
Diet (what your dog eats) and exercise are the other two important ingredients to success. Sometimes medication may play a part.
Your vet Make an appointment with your vet. Schedule a full physical with blood work for your dog. It can help you to know whether your dog has any underlying physical issues.
Request a full thyroid panel (don't rely on just a T3 or T4). Hypothyroidism is often undiagnosed without the full panel. If your dog's thyroid is the problem, medication will be necessary and helpful.
Ask your vet what amount of weight they think is safe for your dog to lose per week. He or she may prescribe a low calorie food. Most dogs do not like it, so be forewarned if you are sensitive to what your dog "likes."
Weigh & Measure your dog Weigh your dog at the vet. Try to make it a habit to go in at least once a month to check the progress on that same scale. Just like we need to use the same scale, so do our dogs!
Measure your dog! Get out a tape measure and measure the neck, chest, and belly. Measure once a month and keep a record. It is truly amazing to see the comparison when it's all over. When we live with them we can't always immediately tell a difference. It is so nice to see any changes, even if it's just on paper. You'll notice a difference in the dog's movements and activity level too, but that comes on slowly as well.
Educate yourself & Measure your dog's food To get started, read everything you can in regards to canine nutrition. Read dog food labels and pay attention to the amount you feed. When you read labels, pick a food that has an animal protein in the top 3 ingredients, and avoid foods that contain mostly corn or grains.
In regards to recommended amounts to feed and type of food, you will have to be proactive and make some decisions on your own.
- Do not go by the recommended daily amount on the kibble bag directions. These are rough estimates and do not cover every dog. The biggest help I've found in this area is to make sure you are not feeding a puppy growth or super high performance food (high calorie) to your overweight couch potato. Most people (including myself) recommend lower calorie but not "diet" food. Feeding less than recommended amounts works just fine.
- If you feel you must feed treats, break them up into tiny pieces and only give one piece. Do not feed the whole milkbone, just a small portion of it. Your dog will not argue this point. It is the point of the treat, not the treat itself that is important to the dog.
- Remember that the less calories you feed the faster you will see results.
Additions & Subtractions If you regularly add cottage cheese or yogurt to your dog's food, try using less and start using non-fat versions. Also, subtract the calories from the total daily caloric intake. If you use treats for training, add them in to the amount of daily intake. Unless you know the treats are healthful I would not recommend using them as a part of your dogs diet. Many treats are empty nutritionally and will rob your dog of vital nutrients that really should be fed in their place. Use pieces of kibble if possible and take it from the day's portions.
For example, if only feeding kibble: If ration is: 1 cup in a.m. - feed ¾ c. & (keep out ¼ c for treats)
If ration is: 1 cup in p.m. - feed ¾ c. & (keep out ¼ c for treats)
Try adding (non-salted) cooked green beans to your dog's meals to stave off "hunger." If the dog will not eat them, you can be sure it is not starving to death. And, if your dog does eat them, it will help to fill him or her up!
You can also try small amounts (teaspoon at a time) of canned 100% pure pumpkin (not pie mix). Substitute it for that amount of kibble. Most dogs like pumpkin, so it is worth a try.
You can give raw veggies as treats if your dog will eat them. They are not well digested but can help ease any hunger pangs. If it works for you and your dog, go for it!
Exercise & Feeding If your dog is not able to tolerate much exercise due to medical restrictions, try to be creative in getting him to expend energy gently. Even if your dog does not have health issues try these changes:
- Instead of feeding your dog in one spot from a dish (where he will not expend much, if any energy), try spreading the food about the house or yard. Make him work for it. Put a trail down the hall, put pieces on a chair, or hide a few pieces under a blanket, box or newspaper. Feed using a buster cube or a Kong toy. Throw the pieces across the floor or make him sit for each piece. If your dog can tolerate stairs, put one piece on each step.
- Build up slowly to safe levels (if possible) and go by your vet's advice in regards to safe exercise.
- For dogs able to tolerate exercise but the owner cannot or will not take extra walks, throw a ball while watching TV, cooking, mowing the lawn, or working on the car. Keep the dog moving whenever you have a chance.
- Use toys for distraction instead of "treats" whenever possible.
- Do not free-feed, period. Well... unless you and your dog decide to forego the diet altogether and start training to run a marathon. In that case start that training slowly too.
Educate others and acknowledge to yourself Don't allow others to sabotage your work! Make sure that everyone who has contact with your dog follows the rules you set up. Be sure they understand the necessity of following through. Explain to them the dangers of obesity such as diabetes, orthopedic, heart problems and shorter life spans. Educating others can help you!
If it helps you, write down everything you offer your dog. The pizza crust, cookie crumbs and leftovers count! Acknowledging your habits truly is the most important part of the change.
Relax and breathe. You can do it, and you and your dog can enjoy it. The weight loss process is just like housebreaking and obedience training, you must learn first before you can be helpful to your dog.
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Pet Health Articles Bloat: The Mother Of All Emergencies
There are many injuries and physical disorders which represent life-threatening emergencies. There is only one condition so drastic that it over shadows them all in terms of rapidity of consequences and effort in emergency treatment. This is the gastric dilatation and volvulus - the "bloat."
Gastric dilatation-volvulus is otherwise known as “bloat,” “stomach torsion,” or “twisted stomach.” The cause of the condition is unknown. It can have tragic consequences and result in death in as short a time as 2 to 3 hours. The stomach bloats as a result of rapid accumulation of gas. Eventually, the distended stomach rotates around its supporting ligaments, trapping the gas and choking off its own blood supply. The distended stomach presses on the chest, making it difficult for the dog to breathe, and compresses large veins in the abdomen, preventing blood from returning to the heart. The difficulty in breathing and the poor blood flow eventually result in collapse and death unless treatment is prompt.
Treatment of gastric dilatation-volvulus is successful in up to 70 per cent of cases if the owners recognize the signs of the disease promptly. The most important sign is distention of the abdomen. If the abdomen becomes drum tight, the diagnosis is almost certain. Other signs include loss of appetite, frequent retching, abdominal pain, distress, and eventually collapse. Treatment begins with rapid intravenous fluid therapy (to replenish lost fluid and improve blood flow) and decompression of the bloated stomach.
Decompression of the gas-filled stomach is usually performed by placing a needle directly into the stomach through the abdominal wall or by passing a tube into the stomach via the mouth. Drugs may be required, including antibiotics, drugs to help prevent shock, and drugs to reduce damage to the stomach lining. When the dog is in as fit a state for surgery as possible, it is anesthetized and operated on to return the stomach to the normal position. In addition, the surgeon will attempt to suture the stomach to the abdominal wall in the correct position in the hope of preventing a further bout of bloat. This is called a “gastropexy.” Without this procedure the likelihood of recurrence of the bloat is as high as 80 per cent. If the surgery reveals extensive areas of dead stomach, the likelihood of the dog surviving the postoperative period is very low. Sadly, in this situation, a veterinarian may advise euthanasia of the dog on the operating table in order to avoid further suffering.
The postoperative period is full of risk for dogs with bloat. Abnormal beats of the heart are common postoperatively, as are life-threatening problems such as severe ulcers or holes (perforations) in the stomach and bowel, pancreas or liver damage, infections, and excessive blood clotting. For this reason, dogs usually remain at the veterinary clinic under close observation for several days after the surgery.
Prevention of gastric dilatation-volvulus is difficult because the underlying cause or causes of the disease are unknown. However, some risk factors that predispose a dog to develop bloat have been recognized. Avoidance of these risk factors (where possible) minimizes the likelihood of the disease occurring. Knowledge of these factors is important if you own a large, deep-chested dog because dogs with this type of conformation are predisposed to this disease (e.g., Great Danes, Mastiffs, Saint Bernards, Weimaraners, Irish Setters, Dobermans, German Shepherds). Risk factors that have been identified in some (but not all) studies include eating only one meal per day (this leads to a larger stomach size than eating two or more meals), eating faster, and a nervous temperament. It is also prudent to avoid exercising dogs when their stomach is full. Many predisposed dogs have the disease precipitated by a stressful event, so owners should be particularly vigilant for the disease at such times.
Some of the factors thought to reduce the risk of bloat are; inclusion of canned food or table scraps in the diet, elevating the feeding dish, feeding 2 or more meals per day, and having an happy or easy-going temperament. Owners of dogs that have multiple risk factors, including having closely related family members with a history of bloat, eating rapidly, or having a fearful or anxious temperament may want to consider having a prophylactic gastropexy done. Consult your veterinarian on his/her views on this procedure. It does require abdominal surgery on a dog that may never bloat, but once one witnesses the horror of losing a dog to bloat, it may seem more important.
It is crucially important that the owners of big dogs be aware of this condition and be prepared for it. Know where to take your dog during overnight or Sunday hours for emergency care. Avoid exercising your dog after a large meal. Know what to watch for. Enjoy the special friendship a large dog provides but at the same time be aware of the large dog’s special needs and concerns.
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Pet Health Articles Thyroid Disease Autoimmune Thyroid Disease: Common Problem of Purebred Dogs
Written by W. Jean Dodds, DVM.
The information provided here outlines an approach that has been used successfully by the author to reduce the prevalence of clinically expressed thyroid disease within susceptible families or breeds.
EARLY THYROID DISEASE (THYROIDITIS) COMPENSATORY AND CLINICAL HYPOTHYROIDISM
Most of the confusion about the diagnosis and treatment of thyroid disease in purebred or mixed breed dogs today stems from the expectation that affected animals must show clinical signs of inadequate thyroid hormonal production (i.e. hypothyroidism) in order to have the disease. The term hypothyroidism has been loosely applied to describe all stages of this disease process whereas strictly speaking it should be reserved for the end-stages when the animal's thyroid gland is no longer capable of producing sufficient hormone(s) to sustain clinical health. At this point, the dog can express any number of the non-specific multisystem signs of thyroid dysfunction. But lets start at the beginning. The most common cause of canine thyroid disease is autoimmune thyroiditis (estimated 90% of cases). Thyroiditis is an immune-mediated process that develops in genetically susceptible individuals and is characterized by the presence of antithyroid antibodies in the blood or tissues. Thyroiditis is believed to start in most cases around puberty, and gradually progress through mid-life and old age to become clinically expressed hypothyroidism once thyroid glandular reserve has been depleted. During this process, the animal or person becomes more susceptible to immune-mediated or other diseases affecting various target tissues and organs. The prerequisite genetic basis for susceptibility to this disorder has been in established in humans, dogs and several other species.
The above explanation helps us to appreciate existing confusion and controversy within the veterinary profession regarding whether or not testing or treatment is indicated for dogs that fail to show typical signs of hypothyroidism. In fact, we have only recently begun to recognize the subtle signs of early thyroid dysfunction in dogs as prevalence of the autoimmune form of the condition has increased within and among dog breeds. Today, some 50 breeds are genetically predisposed to develop thyroid disease.
GENETIC SCREENING FOR THYROID DISEASE These thyroid panels and antibody tests can also be used for genetic screening of apparently healthy animals to evaluate their fitness for breeding. A bitch with antithyroid antibodies in her blood may pass these along to her puppies in her colostral milk. Also, any dog having circulating antithyroid antibodies can eventually develop clinical symptoms of thyroid or other autoimmune diseases. Therefore, thyroid screening can be very important for potential breeding stock. Thyroid testing for genetic screening purposes is less likely to be meaningful before puberty. Screening is initiated, therefore, once healthy dogs and bitches have reached sexual maturity (between 10-14 months in males and during the first anestrus period for females following their maiden heat.) Anestrus is a time when the female sexual cycle is quiescent, thereby removing any influence of sex hormones on baseline thyroid function. This period generally begins 12 weeks from the onset of the previous heat and lasts one month or longer. The interpretation of results from baseline thyroid profiles in intact females is more reliable when they are tested in anestrus. Testing for health screening is performed at 12-16 weeks from the onset of the previous heat. In fact genetic screening of intact females for other parameters like von Willebrand's disease or wellness health and reproductive checkups should also be scheduled in anestrus females. Once the initial thyroid profile is obtained, dogs and bitches should be rechecked on an annual basis to assess their own health. Annual results permit comparisons that should reveal early evidence of developing thyroid disease or dysfunction. This also allows for early treatment where indicated to abort the development or advancement of clinical signs associated with hypothyroidism.
Healthy young dogs (less than 15-18 months of age) should have thyroid baseline levels for all parameters in the upper 1/2 to 1/3 of the adult normal ranges. In fact, for optimum thyroid function in screening breeding stock, levels should be at least at the midpoint of the laboratory normal ranges, because lower levels may well be indicative of the early stages of thyroiditis among relatives of dog families known to have thyroid disease.
TREATMENT OF THYROID DISEASE
The new information summarized here has changed our approach to treatment and control of thyroid disease. In addition to providing thyroid supplementation for dogs showing the typical signs of thyroid disease, we now know that treatment of dogs showing the early stages of thyroiditis (based on the testing described above) is necessary and important to correct the underlying thyroid imbalance, reduce the risk of developing other related immune-mediated disorders, and to control or prevent the process of thyroiditis from progressing to depletion and exhaustion of the thyroid gland.
1. Type of Treatment
The treatment of choice because of its wide safety margin and efficacy is T4 hormone (L - or levothyroxine). The most commonly used brand names are Soloxine (Daniels) and Synthroid (Flint) and we recommend either of these over generics especially for the smaller breeds. Use of T3 hormone (triiodothyronine) is not recommended for initial use because toxicity can more easily develop with this product-T3 is the intercellular hormone whereas most of T4 must be first converted to T3 before it achieves its metabolic effect. In some cases where the animal's body cannot properly convert T4 to T3, the dog will need both T4 and T3 therapy to correct the problem. For this purpose, the general rule of thumb is to give from 2/3 to a full dose of T4 and a 1/3 dosage of T3 (i.e. 0.1 mg per 10-20 pounds of T4 plus 1 ugm per pound of T3 twice daily). However, no dog should be treated with these thyroid hormonal preparations without having proper veterinary testing, medical examination and follow-up.
2. Frequency of Treatment
Thyroid hormones should always be given twice daily to effect the best response. Until recently, veterinarians have been advised to give treatment to effect either once or twice daily because data on this point was unclear. We now know that the half-life of T4 in the dog is about 10-12 hours (much shorter than humans) for T3, it's only 6-8 hours. Thus, about half of the hormone is metabolized and excreted from the body within 12 hours. Furthermore, twice daily dosing aids in controlling thyroiditis because it shuts off pituitary production of TSH by negative feedback in concert with the half-life of the hormone. In other words, the dog's own thyroid follicular cells become quiescent and are less likely to stimulate production of the antithyroid antibodies responsible for the disease. (Obviously these are simplistic explanations of the complex metabolic, immunologic and biochemical events involved). Contrary to some popular wisdom, treatment with thyroid hormone does not destroy or suppress the potential of the gland to respond on its own once treatment is stopped for whatever reason. The latest veterinary research shows that it takes the thyroid gland up to 30 days to recover its full potential once therapy is withdrawn. Therefore if an animal has been medicated, where the diagnosis is unclear, treatment should be withdrawn (if it's clinically safe to do so) for 30 days before the animal is retested with the complete type thyroid profile described above. Follow-up testing after initiating treatment is usually performed after four to eight weeks of therapy. The sample should be taken 4-6 hours after the morning dosage and optimum results will show thyroid values in the upper third of normal ranges at the peak time of absorption. Dosage can then be adjusted accordingly if needed. Dogs on long term therapy with thyroid hormones should be monitored with complete panels (not just T4 as you need to be sure the dog's body is converting the T4 medication properly to T3) on a regular basis (every 6-12 months).
Clinical Signs of Canine Hypothyroidism
Alterations in Cellular Metabolism weakness / stiffness / laryngeal paralysis / facial paralysis / tragic expression / knuckling or dragging feet / muscle wasting / megaesophagus / head tilt / drooping eyelids.
Neuromuscular Problems
lethargy / mental dullness / exercise intolerance / neurologic signs polyneuropathy / seizures / weight gain / cold intolerance / mood swings hyperexcitability / stunted growth / chronic infections.
Dermatologic Diseases
dry, scaly skin and dandruff / coarse, dull coat / bilateral symmetrical hair loss / rat tail, puppy coat / hyperpigmentation / seborrhea or greasy skin pyoderma or skin infections / myxedema / chronic offensive skin odor.
Reproductive Disorders
infertility of either sex / lack of libido / testicular atrophy / hypospermia aspermia / prolonged interestrus interval / absence of heat cycles / silent heats / pseudopregnancy / weak, dying or stillborn pups.
Cardiac Abnormalities
slow heart rate (bradycardia) / cardiac arrhythmias / cardiomyopathys Gastrointestinal Disorders constipation / diarrhea / vomiting
Hematological Disorders
bleeding / bone marrow failure / low red blood cells / low white blood cells / low platelets
Ocular Diseases
corneal lipid deposits / corneal ulceration / uveitis Keratococonjunctivitis / sicca or dry eye / infections of eyelid glands (Meibomian gland)
Other Associated Disorders
lgA deficiency / loss of smell (dysosmia) / loss of taste / glycosuria / chronic active hepatitis / other endocrinopathies adrenal, pancreatic, parathyroid The Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA) now has a canine thyroid registry.
The following approved laboratories currently can accept samples. Contact them for appropriate submission forms, sample handling procedures, and laboratory service fees, before collecting the specimen.
Animal Health Diagnostic Laboratory Endocrine Diagnostic Section PO Box 30078 Lansing, MI 48909c7576
Diagnostic Laboratory New York State College of Veterinary Medicine Cornell University, Upper Tower Rd. Ithaca, NY 14851
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