Posted on 2009 under Dog Digestive Health |
26
Dec
Over the years, the parvo virus has mutated into at least two different strains. Every case of canine parvo virus, or CPV, comes from these two strains.
Every different species has its own parvo virus and it cannot be spread outside of the species, so there is a human parvo virus, a canine parvo virus, a feline parvo virus, and so on. However, it can be spread by contact. For instance, if your cat would wander through your neighbor’s yard and would pick up the virus on her feet, she can track it inside of your house and infect your dog.
Read the rest of this post here (587 words, estimated 2:21 mins reading time)
Posted on 2009 under Dog Digestive Health |
19
Dec
Pathophysiology
The canine parvovirus is a DNA virus that is single stranded and very contagious, found in canines. The first time that this virus appeared was in 1978, but it can be found in every country in the world right now. Canine parvovirus will come in two variants, intestinal and cardiac. In the form that is cardiac, the parvovirus will infect the puppies either after they’re born or while they’re still in the uterus. Very fast, the virus will attack the muscle of the heart, causing heart failure soon after that.
Read the rest of this post here (582 words, estimated 2:20 mins reading time)
Posted on 2009 under Dog Digestive Health |
30
Nov
Most dog owners are familiar with diarrhea in their pets; the condition is a very common one. But only a handful of owners really know anything about diarrheas varieties and causes.
Perhaps the greatest single cause of diarrhea is a change of diet. Thus, a dog that has been used to eating a commercial brand dog food and is suddenly given table scrapes is very likely to suffer diarrhea. A change in drinking water, especially when traveling, can also cause temporary diarrhea.
Read the rest of this post here (723 words, estimated 2:54 mins reading time)
Posted on 2009 under Dog Digestive Health |
30
Nov
Report: Dog Bloat A Disease That Kills
Shortly before 3 o’clock on the morning of August 5, 2007, Donna Hedl was jolted awake by shouts of her niece and nephew, who were visiting Donna and her husband Joe in their Roselle, Illinois, home.
Something was wrong with Congo, the family’s six-year-old German Shepherd!
He was retching, but to no avail, Mrs. Hedl recounted later. There was a slight foam around his mouth and he was constantly swallowing.
As she watched, Congo’s behavior became more peculiar. The dog would sit glassy-eyed and hang his head, or crawl behind a chair and stoop as if to defecate… but, again, to no avail.
Then Mrs. Hedl noticed a slight swelling in Congo’s abdomen.
Read the rest of this post here (2597 words, estimated 10:23 mins reading time)
About Parvovirus
Parvo is a viral disease that affects dogs. This illness can cause severe digestive symptoms, as well as fever and shock and may even prove fatal. Parvovirus attacks rapidly dividing cells like those in the lining of the gastrointestinal tract as well as developing white blood cells.
In this way parvovirus leads to symptoms like bloody diarrhea, vomiting and loss of proper immune system functioning. Puppies are more commonly and more severely affected than adult dogs due to their still-developing immune system. Puppies can easily succumb to this disease, especially when the virus infects the muscle of the heart.
Read the rest of this post here (1495 words, estimated 5:59 mins reading time)
Posted on 2009 under Dog Digestive Health |
22
Aug
How do you feel when you have an upset stomach? Isn’t it that you find it hard to move around and you become uneasy? You make several trips to the bathroom because you feel the need to release it. Indeed, a diarrhea can truly become very uncomfortable on your part. Now you could just imagine how your pet dog feels if he always gets consumed by diarrhea. You should understand why it often poops instead of be mad and punish him. You should know better, so to speak. Again, this forms a part of an emergency situation which every first aid training course covers. After all, first aid is not solely administered on human beings but on animals too!
Why should you express concern over your dog’s diarrhea?
Read the rest of this post here (664 words, estimated 2:39 mins reading time)