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Can Pancreatitis in dogs be spread from one pet to another? – pancreatitis & diabetes in dogs
We have taken our dog, a few months. Toward the end, he developed pancreatitis (among many other things, he has) in recent years, such as diabetes and epilepsy. We have) a new dog (dog and I’m cleaning the teeth with the toothbrush you use up on my other dog’s teeth clean. I know it can be like a good idea, but never a toothbrush that often anyway. He was only 4 when we settled. Is it possible that pancreatitis can my dog to spread my ex-dog again with the same toothbrush? I prefer when a veterinarian, veterinary technician, or even someone with experience in biology could answer this question. Thank you.
Inflammation of the pancreas, or pancreatitis, has several causes and can be sudden or chronic. When the pancreas is inflamed, its normal functioning is disrupted and regular pancreatic enzymes become toxic to the pancreas. Withholding food, fluid therapy and medications encompass treatment options for this painful condition. Dogs need hospitalization for proper monitoring during acute pancreatitis, but monitoring chronic pancreatitis varies, depending on the case.
Vomiting and anorexia, two common signs of pancreatitis, cause dogs to become dehydrated. Lactated ringers or 0.9 percent sodium chloride solutions given intravenously or by injections under the skin will correct dehydration. Long-term food withdrawal requires enteral nutrition, defined as liquid supplementation given through stomach or nasal tubes. The liquid diet is made by pharmaceutical companies to be nutritionally optimal and its medical formulation includes proteins, fats, minerals, vitamins, amino acids, and fatty acids.
Pancreatitis frequently causes dogs to vomit. The vomiting can lead to dehydration, physical exhaustion, and aspiration pneumonia. Anti-vomiting medications, antiemtics, are prescribed by veterinarians to control the impulse. Antichoinergic drugs block pathways from the intestinal tract to the vomiting center. Antihistamines block nerve transmission to the vomiting center and serotonin antagonists block the chemoreceptor trigger zone to cease vomiting. Also, butophanol, a sedative, works directly on the vomiting center.
Pancreatitis is a very painful condition. The swelling of the pancreas causes abdominal organ displacement and abdominal pain. Injections of pain medications should be given for the duration of pancreatitis. Opioids, such as fentanyl or morphine, are considered the best pain medications for pancreatitis, but meperidine and butorphanol can be used as well. Also, abdominal infusions of lidocaine or bupivacaine alleviate abdominal pain.
When digestive enzymes become activated within the pancreas, due to injury of disease, the enzymes begin digesting the pancreas itself. Benefits have been shown from giving oral enzyme supplementation, such as Viokase. These additive enzymes seem to function on the feed-back mechanism within the intestines. Since the intestines sense digestive enzymes present, they relay the message to the pancreas telling it to cease enzyme production, thus decreasing enzyme production within the pancreas.
Some dogs have a metabolic problem that prevents proper clearing of fat from the blood stream. It is called hyperlipemia, which contributes to the development of pancreatitis. A low-fat diet and the use of statin medications help control levels of fat, or lipids, in the bloodstream. Statins, such as Levacor, Zocor, Pravachol, and Lipitor, block the enzyme in the liver that is responsible for making cholesterol, lowering blood lipids.
We are approaching that time of the year when pancreatitis becomes a problem⦠Thanksgiving.
Owners feed their dogs too many fatty foods, often times turkey skin, or for my breedâWeimaranersâthey steal fatty foods, which leads to sickness. Pancreatitis is anecdotally more common Weimaraners, as is counter surfing!
Whenever my dogs get any highly fatty foods, I usually follow that up by giving them a digestive enzyme with Pancreatin. Pancreatin is a combination of the enzymes amylase, lipase, and protease. My first two weims got pancreatitis several times. It is VERY painful for the dog and nearly killed them. Since I began my regimen of giving digestive enzymes after consumption of fatty foods, there has been no reoccurrence of the problem.
Be aware of the symptoms and what to do about it. Following is an excerpt from an article. You can read the full article here.
âAcute pancreatitis is characterized by the abrupt onset of vomiting and severe pain in the abdomen. The dog may have a tucked-up belly and assume a prayer position. Abdominal pain is caused by the release of digestive enzymes into the pancreas and surrounding tissue. Diarrhea, dehydration, weakness, and shock may ensue.
The diagnosis can be suspected based on a physical examination. It is confirmed by blood tests showing elevated amylase and/or lipase levels, along with a new serum test called canine pancreatitis lipase immuninol reactivity and TAP (trypsinogen activation peptide). Abdominal ultrasonography may reveal an enlarged and swollen pancreas.
Mild pancreatitis produces loss of appetite, depression, intermittent vomiting, and diarrhea and weight loss.â
Please keep an eye on your dog around the holidays and donât leave that turkey or ham on the table unattended!
â Canine Pancreatitis – Whole Dog Journal Article
Whole Dog Journal contributor Mary Straus explains that canine Pancreatitis can be a serious acute condition, or just a chronic pain. Symptoms to look for in your dog
Pancreatitis in Dogs – Health Guidance – Free Health Articles
Pancreatitis can pose life threatening risks amongst dogs. Itâs a reasonably prevalent ailment pet owners have to encounter with their dogs.
Canine Pancreatitis – LoveToKnow: Advice women can trust
When a dog suffers from inflammation of the pancreas, he has canine pancreatitis. This health condition is not uncommon for dogs. It is painful and can even be life …
Pancreatitis In Dogs – Canine Pancreatitis – Dog Pancreatitis
All about Pancreatitis in Dogs.Best tips and information from Dr. Per Schonbeck about pancreas problems in your dog.
Pancreatitis in dogs – Prosser Animal Hospital
Acute pancreatitis may either take a mild, edematous form or a more severe, hemorrhagic form. The associated inflammation allows digestive enzymes from the …
Pancreatitis – Canine Diabetes Wiki
Pancreatitis is acute or chronic inflammation of the pancreas. It may be caused by infection, or…
Pancreatitis in Dogs – Causes, Symptoms and Treatment of Canine …
Pancreatitis is the acute or chronic inflammation of the pancreas. Find out the causes, symptoms and treatment of pancreatitis in dogs.
Pets with Diabetes: Pancreatitis and Diabetes
Pets With Diabetes: Pancreatitis and diabetes in pets. Dogs and cats with pancreatitis and diabetes. Pancreatitis can cause diabetes. Diabetes can lead to pancreatitis.
PLI – Texas AandM University | College Station, TX
Introduction Pancreatitis, an inflammatory condition of the exocrine pancreas, occurs frequently in both dogs and cats. While the true prevalence of pancreatitis in …
Acute Pancreatitis in Dogs – Page 2 – Pet Place – Pet Care – Pet …
Diagnosis Diagnostic tests are needed to identify acute pancreatitis and exclude other diseases. These may include one or more of the following:
Canine Pancreatitis
The risk of developing fatal pancreatitis is increased in dogs who are overweight, or have diabetes mellitus …
Acute Pancreatitis in Dogs – Page 3 – Pet Place – Pet Care – Pet …
Other medical problems can lead to symptoms similar to those encountered in acute pancreatitis. It is important to exclude these conditions before establishing a …
Pancreatitis, Canine – Upstate Animal Medical Center
Pancreatitis Pancreatitis Affected Animals Dogs and cats. Middle-aged to older female dogs are more likely to be affected by pancreatitis than other dogs.
pancreatitis in dogs – Pet Forums Community
hi im new to the forum and i am desperate for some advice. my cocker spaniel has had two bad attacks of pancreatitis over the past few months. she is
Pancreatitis – The Whole Dog
article – pancreatitis in dogs … What Is Pancreatitis? by Dr. Jeannie Thomason When the pancreas becomes inflamed, the disorder is called pancreatitis.
Pancreatitis in Dogs. Schnauzer Health Problems: Canine Pancreatitis
A guide to Pancreatitis in dogs: Signs, risk factors, treatment and prevention. Why canine pancreatitis is one of the important Schnauzer health problems..
Pancreatitis in Dogs – Vet Arena
Pancreatitis in Dogs. This is an Article on Pancreatitis in Dogs within the Dogs Health care Articles Category; FUNCTIONS OF THE PANCREAS The pancreas is a small, v …
LIFE THREATENING PANCREATITIS Guardian Angel Linda
LIFE THREATENING PANCREATITIS Guardian Angel Linda (and Bailey) researched and compiled the following information. Pancreatitis in dogs is life threatening.
Sign | % of cats affected |
Lethargy | 100% |
Poor appetite | 97% |
Dehydration | 92% |
Rapid breathing rate | 74% |
Low body temperature | 68% |
Jaundice | 64% |
Rapid heart rate | 48% |
Vomiting | 35% |
Abdominal pain | 25% |
Abdominal mass felt on physical exam | 23% |
Labored breathing | 20% |
Diarrhea | 15% |
Incoordination | 15% |
fever | 7% |
                                                                 Â
Pancreatitis is a disease process we see often in the hospital primarily with mini schnauzers, however any breed can be affected.
The dog pancreas has two main jobs: secretion of digestive enzymes to help break down the food we eat and the secretion of the enzymes insulin and glucagon to regulate our sugar metabolism.
In pancreatitis, the pancreas becomes inflamed and the enzymes that are normally safely released are now digesting the pancreas itself instead of food. This occurrence results in a metabolic catastrophe that can be life threatening. Secondarily pancreatitis can also lead to diabetes, DIC (bleeding disorder), pancreatic encephalopathy (brain damage), and lung or liver damage.Â
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The classic signs of pancreatitis are appetite loss, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and pain in the abdomen.
Treatment of pancreatitis includes hydration with electrolyte supplementation, pain management, medication to control vomiting and diarrhea, and antibiotics.Â
In most cases of pancreatitis we never find out what caused it. Some known causes of pancreatitis are: reflux of intestinal contents into the pancreatic duct, trauma, concurrent hormonal imbalances like diabetes, hypothyroidism, and hypercalcemia (high calcium levels), drugs like sulfas and certain chemotherapy agents, and cancer.Â
Once dogs have recovered from pancreatitis we keep them maintained on a low fat diet and reevaluate them on a regular basis to make sure that diabetes has not developed.
Dr. Kim Simons
West Boca Veterinary Center
www.westbocavet.com
Those of you who have been reading this blog awhile know about my beautiful black Lab Mia. Sheâs two years old and is pretty much your typical lab only
mostly calm. Sheâs a brilliant and accomplished counter surfer. Just this year she has absconded with: a ribeye steak, an entire pizza, about 6 cinnamon muffins, a bottle of the kids ibuprophen (poison control call + 2 day hospital stay on IV fluids, gastroprotectants, etc.), a bottle of Vitamin D capsules (poison control call, but fortunately it wasnât a toxic dose).Â
My friend and dog, zebra, exotic animal trainer and bear wrangler (http://www.texasbear.org/)  extraordinaire Jason Mayfield kindly informed me that Miaâs little âproblemâ is 100% my fault (http://www.petiquettedog.com/dog-behavior/counter-surfing-wheres-beef/)
The above article says I should teach my dog alternate behaviors to counter surfing like banning her from the kitchen. This, incidentally would also curb her dishwasher dish licking which would also be a good thing. I shall add this to my to-do list, right next to âfinish 2008 photo album, 2009 album, 2010 albumââ¦you get the pictureâ.
I tried mouse traps (I wrapped the wire snappy part in double stick tape so it wouldnât hurt herâ¦donât get all judgy!) And they worked brilliantly for about two snaps. Then she figured out what the traps look like and learned to only counter surf in non-trap areas.Â
She is astoundingly sneaky. During the mouse trap period, she casually watched me in the kitchen the whole time I baited them with roast beef, waffles, etc. She was very nonchalant about it, just keeping me in view, out of the corner of her eye.  She even let me leave the room to check my email.  I was beginning to think she had super human intuition and knew the traps were evil. But no, she waited until the SECOND I left the house to get something out of the car to strike. I heard the trap snap and found her looking sheepish under a chair. The hit the trap one more time later that day when my husband and I were in outside in the patio. Â
I had hoped that that would scare her out of covert countertop behavior, but nope. Our busy, distracted lifestyle lends itself to forgotten food on the counters and itâs just too tempting.Â
This Christmas day she hit the mother lode. We learned that cooking bacon in the oven is by far the best way to make it. Easy peasy and crispy perfect pig strips (as my family calls them) every time. We are usually very careful with the bacon grease soaked paper towels and pans, but this was Christmas.
The in-law came over and we got distracted. The kids got a go-kart for Christmas so we all went outside to watch the inaugural drive.  (During which my 9-year-old son yells âWhich oneâs the brake!â)
I came back inside within just a few minutes because it was flippinâ cold outside. I swear I could hear the scary âPsychoâ knife stabbing in the shower moment music playing overhead. Scully (my little old lady who is a lower elevation food theif) was maniacally licking the floor. Mia had âthe guilty faceâ.Â
It took me a minute to piece together what was going on, nothing looked amiss in the kitchen. I wandered into the living room andâ¦(key the scary movie music again, you know with all the screechy violinsâ¦or even the music from any JJ Abrams show) â¦THERE WAS A PERFECTLY CLEAN BACON PAN.
This would probably not strike a cold knife of fear into the heart of a mere lay person, but I know the danger of bacon grease.  Consumption of that much fatty grease is pretty much guaranteed to give the canine consumer a raging case of pancreatitis. Which can be fatal.Â
âAw Shucks!â I proclaim calmly*
* This is not what happened at all. I actually unleashed a torrent of profanities that would definitely make Santa blush and put me on the naughty list, but this is a family blog.
I then went into problem solving mode. She had just eaten all the grease, which in this situation is a poison, so I decided to approach it like any other poisoning. I grabbed my handy-dandy bottle of peroxide (that we use solely for dog inappropriate object ingestions) and proceeded to try to make Mia and Scully (because I wasnât sure how much second-hand grease she got) puke. Â
I waited, and waited (it was old peroxide) and nobody vomited. Ok. Plan âBâ, go to the ER and get the âgood stuffâ. Apomorphine, generally always vomit inducing.Â
I sped to the ER, just daring a cop to pull me over. I had my speech all ready, I was going to make him escort me to the ER then back home.  They always ask you if you have some kind of emergency, and dang nabbit, I did. Pancreatitis treatment is expensive! Even for me.Â
I sheepishly walk in, explain the situation and get my Apomorphine and some activated charcoal âto goâ.
Of course Mia barfed (a nice greasy pile of Christmas rawhide goo) before I got home so I just froze the apomorphine. God knows I may need it another time.Â
Step 2 is to try to bind up any leftover grease in the dogs so it isnât absorbed. Thatâs what the activated charcoal/UAA (Universal Animal Antidote) gel is for. Itâs got stuff in it to bind all the bad stuff. Itâs black as the night and probably not too tasty. Scully and Mia both get big fat doses.Â
OK, now what? The pancreas is a squishy little non descript organ that makes digestive enzymes and stuff. My take on why they get pancreatitis from eating fatty stuff is that the sudden deluge makes the gland just start activating digestive enzymes like crazy and it blows itself up. Not literally, but physiologically, itâs sort of like a little fire, just in the belly.Â
I decided to try to make its job easer (after the vomit induction and charcoal) by giving her a cocktail of more charcoal, pepcid (to turn off her digestive acid producers), and digestive enzymes (to maybe do some of the pancreasâ work for it, to ease its burden). Itâs total voodoo that I made up, but I hoped it helped. I also put both dogs on an ultra low-fat diet, to further aid that pancreas.Â
Thankfully, nobody got sick. I had to board the dogs the next day, as we had plane tickets to visit my brother in San Diego. (My water heater broke and was leaking onto the garage ceiling on Christmas day as well, thus we had to shut off the water to the house, and subsequently cancel the house/pet sitter). The AMCOP staff took care of them beautifully, with nary a hiccup.
I supposed I can either attribute it to my stellar intervention or their cast iron stomachs. Either way, Iâm glad theyâre ok.Â
Weâre trying to be more diligent in the kitchen. I am going to have to start enforcing the âno dogs in the kitchen ruleâ. Hopefully it will be more effective than the âno dogs on the couchâ rule, or the âno dogs pooping on the dining room rugâ rule.Â
Sigh.
â Pancreatitis (Inflammation) in Dogs – Pet Health Care | Dog and …
Causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of pancreatitis, an inflammation of the pancreas.
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Pancreatitis in the dog – Vet on the web.co.uk – The UK and …
A vets clinical description of causes and treatments for pancreatitis in pet dogs with illustration in the Pet Clinic on Vetontheweb the leading UK online Veterinary …
Canine pancreatitis – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Although there can be various causes of dog pancreatitis, such as drugs, fatty diet, trauma, etc., the pathophysiology is very complex.
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It may be tempting to give extra treats to pets, but caution is advised — Pancreatitis and other stomach/gut upsets can occur, leading to a trip to the vet in some …
Pancreatitis and Pancreas Problems – VetInfo
This page contains general information and real life cases of Pancreatitis in Dogs that have been treated by Dr. Mike Richards, DVM. General Information
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Don’t just sit there scratching your head, find useful info on Dog Pancreatitis on eHow. Get essential tips and learn more about everything from Cures for Dogs With …
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Pancreatitis in dogs is supposed to have multiple causes including diet, injury and reactions to certain medications. Mild cases of canine pancreatitis are treatable …
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Obesity: Many dogs with pancreatitis are overweight. Dogs also are more likely to develop pancreatitis after eating a meal with a high fat content, …