Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Dangers To Your Dog

If you have a dog ... PLEASE read

this and send it on. If you don't have a dog, please pass along to friends who do.

Written by:

Laurinda Morris, DVM
Danville Veterinary Clinic
Danville , OH


This week I had the first case in history of
raisin toxicity ever seen at MedVet. My patient was a 56-pound, 5 yr old male neutered lab mix that ate half a canister of raisins sometime between 7:30 AM and 4:30 PM on Tuesday. He started with vomiting, diarrhea and shaking about 1AM on Wednesday but the owner didn't call my
emergency service until
7AM .

I had heard somewhere about raisins AND
grapes causing acute Renal failure but
hadn't seen any formal paper on the
subject. We had her bring the dog in immediately.
In the meantime, I called the ER service at
MedVet, and the doctor there was like me -
had heard something about it, but . Anyway, we contacted the ASPCA National
Animal Poison Control Center and
they said to give IV fluids at 1 & 1/2 times maintenance and watch the kidney values for the next 48-72 hours.

The dog's BUN (blood urea nitrogen level)
was already at 32 (normal less than 27) and
creatinine over 5 (1.9 is the high end of
normal). Both are monitors of kidney
function in the bloodstream. We placed an
IV catheter and started the fluids.
Rechecked the renal values at 5 PM and the
BUN was over 40 and creatinine over 7 with
no urine production after a liter of fluids. At
the point I felt the dog was in acute renal
failure and sent him on to MedVet for a
urinary catheter to monitor urine output
overnight as well as overnight care.

He started vomiting again overnight at
MedVet and his renal values have continued to increase daily. He produced urine when given lasix as a diuretic. He was
on 3 different anti-vomiting medications and
they still couldn't control his vomiting. Today his urine output decreased again, his BUN
was over 120, his creatinine was at 10, his
phosphorus was very elevated and his blood
pressure, which had been staying around
150, skyrocketed to 220 ... He continued to
vomit and the owners elected to
Euthanize.

This is a very sad case - great dog, great
owners who had no idea raisins could be a
toxin. Please alert everyone you know who
has a dog of this very serious risk.

Poison control said as few as 7 raisins or
grapes could be toxic. Many people I know
give their dogs grapes or raisins as treats
including our ex-handler's. Any exposure
should give rise to immediate concern.


Onions, chocolate, cocoa and macadamia
nuts can be fatal, too.

Even if you don't have a dog, you might
have friends who do. This is worth passing
on to them.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Hello,

Nice post has been shared here. i did get lots of good information from here. thanks for sharing such information here. it would be nice if you can share some information related to Flea control here in your future posts. keep posting....

Thanks,