UPCOMING EVENTS

506 – Pancreatitis: Acute, Chronic and Other Diseases of the Pancreas

Pancreatitis: Acute, Chronic and Other Diseases of the Pancreas

Dr. Marty Greer, DVM joins host Laura Reeves for a deep dive on Pancreatitis, a common ailment in our dogs seen during the holidays, and other diseases of the pancreas in dogs.

“Pancreatitis is inflammation of the pancreas. It is always an inflammatory condition. The pancreas is a very important organ in your body. It has two sections to it and it lives right outside your stomach and intestines. It does two jobs. One is it produces enzymes to digest your food and the other is it produces insulin to control your blood sugar.

“There’s a couple of different kinds of pancreatitis. There’s acute and chronic pancreatitis and then there is Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency (EPI) and then there’s diabetes. Those are the most common disorders that we see in the pancreas and the dog we can also on rare occasion see pancreatic tumors they’re called insulinomas. (They’re) not common … we see on average maybe one of these every couple of years … if we do see pancreatic cancer it tends to be the insulinoma kind, which causes the blood glucose to drop too low and then the dogs will come in with a seizure type of activity.

“Most pancreatitis is associated with vomiting. About 90% of the dogs with pancreatitis present with vomiting. The reports are about half will present with abdominal pain. I can tell you having had four episodes of pancreatitis, that if your dog turns around and tries to bite your veterinarian during the time that they’re feeling their abdomen, palpating it to check if there’s any abnormalities that they can feel like masses or foreign bodies or anything, that dog is justified in biting the veterinarian because there is nothing that hurts much worse in my experience than pancreatitis.

“(The cause) tends to be … the dog knocks over the trash and eats the drippings from the Turkey or the chicken or the ham fat or the scallop potatoes. One of those kind of fatty meals that are associated with what we do at the holidays.

“That’s a fairly typical history, but even without that high fat meal, we can still see pancreatitis. We also can see some of these patients that have recurrences, so they become that low grade chronic pancreatitis patient. Those dogs have to be managed long term very carefully on low fat well managed diets so that the patient doesn’t have recurrences and flare ups. Eventually too many episodes of pancreatitis we feel can probably cause scarring of the pancreas and potentially lead to diabetes.”

346 – Safely Incorporating Our Dogs in Holiday Festivities

Safely Incorporating Our Dogs in Holiday Festivities

Dr. Marty Greer, DVM and Host Laura Reeves riff on safely incorporating our pets in the holiday festivities, from electricity to plants to food to weather.

Greer’s recommendations include:

  • Electric cord safety – wrap thin cords with metal safety coil
  • Jingle bells on low branches for warning that the dog is in trouble
  • Unwrapped candy canes that aren’t dangerous on low branches
  • Keep the canned spinach on hand
  • Secure tree to ceiling or wall
  • Crate the dog during dinner with a stuffed kong or chew bone to entertain them.
  • Beware of alcohol consumption. Guests don’t always take the dog into consideration when setting down a glass.
  • Make your dog part of the meal with snacks of raw carrots, small bits of meat instead of fats
  • Save broth cooked with bones, carrots, celery for food dressing
  • No more than 10% of meal should be additive. Commercial kibble is precisely formatted to meet the dogs needs. Substantially altering the contents of the meal can cause problems.
  • Mistletoe and Easter Lilly and Yew plants are highly toxic. Poinsettia actually isn’t. Macadamia nuts and raisins are food items less known to be toxic.
  • Boots are good for dogs in extreme cold or wet snow. Greer recommends the musher boots used in the Iditarod.
  • Pet safe deicer and antifreeze — both products are excellent. If dogs walk on salt or deicer that isn’t suited to pets, rinse their feet thoroughly as soon as you can.
  • Dressing up our dogs entertains us, but not all dogs find it funny. Let your pet make the choice on outfits.
  • Slushy snow is bad as it can freeze in the feet and undercarriage.

For more information about preventing and dealing with potential intestinal blockages, listen here.