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Dangers of Cooked Bones

Last activity 03 March 2015 by Priscilla

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Heart Collector

The cooking process makes bones more brittle, increasing the likelihood they might splinter and cause internal injury to your dog.
Cooking can also remove the nutrition contained in bones.
Following risks associated with giving your dog a cooked bone to chew:
1.    Broken teeth. This may call for expensive veterinary dentistry.
2.    Mouth or tongue injuries. These can be very bloody and messy and may require a trip to see your veterinarian.
3.    Bone gets looped around your dog’s lower jaw. This can be frightening or painful for your dog and potentially costly to you, as it usually means a trip to see your veterinarian.
4.    Bone gets stuck in esophagus, the tube that food travels through to reach the stomach. Your dog may gag, trying to bring the bone back up, and will need to see your veterinarian.
5.    Bone gets stuck in windpipe. This may happen if your dog accidentally inhales a small enough piece of bone. This is an emergency because your dog will have trouble breathing. Get your pet to your veterinarian immediately!
6.    Bone gets stuck in stomach. It went down just fine, but the bone may be too big to pass out of the stomach and into the intestines. Depending on the bone’s size, your dog may need surgery or upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, a procedure in which your veterinarian uses a long tube with a built-in camera and grabbing tools to try to remove the stuck bone from the stomach.
7.    Bone gets stuck in intestines and causes a blockage. It may be time for surgery.
8.    Constipation due to bone fragments. Your dog may have a hard time passing the bone fragments because they’re very sharp and they scrape the inside of the large intestine or rectum as they move along. This causes severe pain and may require a visit to your veterinarian. Bones also contain a lot of calcium, which is very firming to the stool.
9.    Severe bleeding from the rectum. This is very messy and can be dangerous. It’s time for a trip to see your veterinarian.
10.    Peritonitis. This nasty, difficult-to-treat bacterial infection of the abdomen is caused when bone fragments poke holes in your dog’s stomach or intestines. Your dog needs an emergency visit to your veterinarian because peritonitis can kill your dog

Primadonna

Interesting information but what has this to do with expats?

Heart Collector

1) This was an isolated forum
2) It is a general information which does not change wherever you are
3) Even Expats are not allowed to feed the cooked bones

Heart Collector

:cool:

Primadonna

Heart Collector wrote:

2) It is a general information which does not change wherever you are


I agree but these kind information belongs on a pet or a dog forum, not an expat site.

Heart Collector

Is it not in the pet section ?

Priscilla

Primadonna wrote:
Heart Collector wrote:

2) It is a general information which does not change wherever you are


I agree but these kind information belongs on a pet or a dog forum, not an expat site.


@ Heart Collector > I am afraid that your topic is not really relevant to this expat site, like Primadonna has just said .
Indeed, we are on the Pets forum category to talk about expatriation for pets, like formalities to bring pets to X country etc but not for this kind of information that you are sharing.

I am therefore closing this thread.

Regards

Priscilla

(Topic closed )

Closed

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