#47 Chinese New Year 2018- The Year of the Earth Dog- Feb 20, 2018

Chinese New Year
Year of the Dog

Each year around this time the Chinese celebrate the New Year based on the lunar calendar. They are named around the 12 animals of the Chinese Zodiac. Last year was the Year of the Rooster, and this is the Year of the Dog. Also, different elemental signs are also associated with each year, which makes this Year of the Earth Dog. 1982, which happened to be the year I graduated from Vet School at Texas A&M University, was also a Year of the Dog
The dog is the symbol for loyalty and honesty. Humans born in the Year of the Dog may possess traits like honesty, friendliness, faithfulness, loyalty, and intelligence. But they may also be self-righteous, stubborn, cold, and critical. I think the positive traits sound like a perfect canine companion.
Traditionally, the New Year celebration is the most important festival of the year, a time of renewal, clearing out the bad and starting fresh. It lasts for 15 days, with different activities each day, culminating in Lantern Feast on the 15th day. Each food has symbolism, with lots of red and oranges (for luck) items. Many whole fish and uncut noodle dishes are served. Money is often given as gifts in little red envelopes. I have had the good luck to attend 2 feasts in Richardson where 12 people sit around a round table, and course after course of traditional foods are served family style. Yum. Day 2, Feb 17th this year, was the birthday for all dogs.
So let’s enjoy this Year of the Earth Dog. Celebrate those ideal canine qualities. (We can’t celebrate Year of the Cat because they aren’t on the zodiac- but that is a different story) Next will be Year of the Pig. And this Thursday, February 22 is National Margarita day! Ole!

#46 Valentine’s Day Doggie Treats

So you want to celebrate this holiday with your best 4 legged friend. But you know that chocolate is “bad” for dogs and cats. Actually, it is the theobromine and fats in chocolate that are bad, toxicity is dose dependent, and dark chocolate is loaded with more theobromine than milk chocolate. So the dose is relative to the size of the dog and the darkness of the chocolate. I have seen large dogs accidentally eat a large amount of chocolate and still be OK. I have seen a basset hound eat a whole big heart shaped box of assorted chocolates, and get a raging case of pancreatitis from the fat ingested that require hospitalization. I have seen a tiny 10 # dachshund eat a 12 oz bar Hershey bar (a potentially toxic dose)and we needed to induce vomiting. But if your dog eats a few M&Ms, it probably isn’t an issue.
That said, it is still safer to make some dog and cat friendly non-chocolate Valentine treats. Here are some recipes.

Carob Doggie Delights- from Dogington Post
Making homemade dog treats is a fun way to let your canine companions know they are your special valentines.
Carob Doggie Delights
1 1/2 Cups Wheat Flour
1/2 Cup Rolled Oats
1/4 Cup Carob Powder
1 Tablespoon ground Flax Seed (Optional)
1/2 Teaspoon Baking Powder
1 Egg
1/2 Cup Water
1 Tablespoon Honey
Instructions:
In a small bowl combine the wheat flour, rolled oats, carob, flax seed, and baking powder. Set aside. In a separate bowl beat together the egg, water, and honey. Add the dry ingredients and mix until well blended and forms a stiff dough.
Place on floured surface and roll to desired thickness. Cut into heart shapes. Bake at 300 degrees. If rolled to 3/8″ baking time is 30 minutes to 35 minutes.
Tip: Make these valentine dog treats something really special by drizzling with carob. Melt carob chips in the microwave or double boiler and drizzle over treats.

Tuna Catnip Kitty Treats from Joy the Baker.com
1 (5 ounce) can tuna, no salt added and packed in water, drained
1 cup oat flour*
1 large egg
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 heaping tablespoon dried catnip
*It’s easy to make your own oat flour. Simply grind old-fashioned oats in a spice grinder (or a super clean coffee grinder) until it is transformed into a light powder. There you have it — oat flour!
Place a rack in the upper third of the oven and preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and set aside.
In the bowl of a food processor fitted with a blade attachment, combine drained tuna, oat flour, egg, olive oil and catnip. Blend until mixture is smooth. It will be thick but pliable and not terribly sticky.
Roll dough into 1/2 teaspoon balls and place on prepared cookie sheet. Use a skewer to press an X-shape into each cookie ball.
Bake cookies for 10 to 12 minutes until they are dried on top and slightly browned. Allow to cool completely before offering to your kitty.
Place treats in an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for up to seven days.

https://www.rover.com/blog/homemade-valentine-dog-treats/
http://www.dogingtonpost.com/valentines-day-dog-treat-recipes/
http://joythebaker.com/2014/01/tuna-catnip-kitty-treats/

#45 This Is Us Spoiler- Feb 8, 2018

February is Heart Month

I am a big fan of the TV series “This is us”. It has been no secret that the dad, Jack, dies when the triplets are teenagers. But we didn’t know exactly how he died until the show after the Super bowl, last Sunday. Here is the spoiler- it was heart disease, not the fire.
And this is National Heart Month. People wearing red dresses to raise awareness, Valentines and all that.
How is this related to heart disease in pets? Many people don’t know that dogs, cats, and ferrets can get heart disease. Mostly we see congestive heart disease and cardiomyopathy, not myocardial infarctions, aka “heart attacks” like Jack did. Humans do get congestive heart disease 2nd to valvular disease, and some poor young athletes have dropped dead on the playing field with cardiomyopathy that they didn’t even know they had.
What’s the difference? What do all these words mean?
Congestive heart disease is where the blood is not pumped 100% forward through the heart because one or more valves doesn’t close all the way, leading to fluid” backing up”. And the most common valve affected in the mitral valve on the left “high pressure” side of the heart, so it backs blood up to the lungs. This is the most common type of heart disease that I see as a general practitioner. It is usually in smaller dogs, older dogs, and ones that have had some teeth/gum disease. There is definitely a gum disease/valve link. I will usually hear a heart murmur, which is actually the sound of the turbulence of the blood in the leaky valves. It can later progress to the dog coughing on exertion, or when they have been sleeping on one side. When this occurs in humans, they have the option of open heart surgery and valve replacement. The procedure was actually pioneered on dogs as surgery model but it is seldom done on geriatric canine patients. We manage it as clinicians and owners with rest, blood pressure medicines, diuretics to move the fluid away from the lungs, and a drug called pimbobendin (Vetmedin) that helps the heart pump stronger. It replaces the digitalis medicine that we used years ago. Thankfully, I don’t see congestive heart disease in cats, or ferrets. Unfortunately, King Cavalier Spaniels as a breed have a high incidence of congestive heart disease, even at a young age, so there seems to be a genetic component is some breeds.
Cardiomyopathy means disease of heart muscle. The actual muscle becomes weak, stretches out slowly, making it larger and harder to pump blood efficiently. We see it in some breeds of dogs, like Boxers, Dobermans, and some cats like Maine Coons. It is a tragic disease because it is hard to manage and the pets die young. In the 1980s we were seeing a lot of cats of all ages with it. Veterinarians discovered that cats needed a unique amino acid called taurine for heart health, and it was absent in some cat foods. Once that amino acid was added to cat food, this form of cardiomyopathy all but disappeared. Thus we discovered that cats aren’t just little dogs, and you can’t feed them dog food exclusively.
Ferrets also get cardiomyopathy. We haven’t found a genetic or nutritional link in this species, and it is difficult to manage those “big” hearted fellows too.
Heart attacks in pets? Probably not the same underlying coronary artery disease as humans, but they certainly can die suddenly from heart disease of any kind.
I wish I had great news about ways to “cure” heart disease, but I don’t. Pets and people die when the ticker gives out, just like Jack did. And we cry.

For more information:
http://newsroom.heart.org/events/february-is-american-heart-month-6669831
article on mitral insufficiency- http://www.veterinarypartner.com/Content.plx?P=A&S=0&C=0&A=1968
canine cardiomyopathy – http://www.veterinarypartner.com/Content.plx?P=A&S=0&C=0&A=2496
feline cardiomyopathy- http://www.veterinarypartner.com/Content.plx?P=A&S=0&C=0&A=2507

#44 Your pet might need a teeth cleaning – Feb 1, 2018

dental cleaning month
Dach with toothbrush

February is National Pet Dental Health Month, again.
In the great tradition of Jeff Foxworthy, let’s play “Your pet might need a teeth cleaning”
1. If your dog’s mouth smells worse than his butt…
2. If you smell your dog before you see him…
3. If your dog pants in your face and your eyes water…
4. If you have to feed canned food because she can’t eat kibble anymore….
5. If his pillow is wet in the morning from drool…
6. If the edges of the sofa are stained with blood from her rubbing her mouth on it…
7. If she flinches when you pet her face…
8. And last – If you have to chew your pets food for him…
Actually, these are examples of oral and gum disease gone WAY past needing a “just a cleaning. “
Let us help BEFORE it gets that bad.
February is National Pet Dental Health Month. Here at Garden Ridge Animal Hospital, we offer 15% off dental cleaning procedures during February. All animals will have pre-anesthetic bloodwork, be fully anesthetized, monitored, and on fluids during the ~30-45 minute procedure. The entire mouth will be fully examined, probed, cleaned, polished & fluoride treatment applied. If we find problems like teeth that need extractions or oral masses, you will get a phone call with a plan. It is a day procedure. We don’t perform dental radiographs, but if they are indicated, we will refer your pet to the local veterinary board certified dentist.

Test Yourself!
How much do you know about your pet’s dental health? Take this quiz to find out. http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/2511639/169767dabec4
https://www.avma.org/public/PetCare/Pages/Pet-Dental-Care.aspx