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Pet Care

Common Health Problems

Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Allergies is one of the most common health problem for pets, but there’s a lot you can do to help your pet feel better.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Arthritis is a condition in which an animal’s joints become inflamed, often accompanied by pain, heat, and swelling in the joints, and it usually results in increasing stiffness and immobility. It doesn’t have to mean a poor quality of life for your pet, however.
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Relevant to Dogs
My ten yearl old dog is suffering from arthritis in her back hips. What can I do to make her more comfortable?
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics Relevant to Birds Relevant to Small Mammals
A team approach to your pet’s health care is in their best interest because it allows for state-of-the-art veterinary care. You, your veterinarian and the specialist veterinarian work together to ensure that your pet receives the very best medical treatment and care possible.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Dogs can get bloated like us, although it’s a lot more dangerous! Excess gas, fluid or foam in your dog’s stomach can be life-threatening.
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Relevant to Dogs
A study dispels a nutritional myth of canine bloat.
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Relevant to Dogs
Although hip dysplasia is a genetic condition, research shows that environmental factors can also put a dog at risk.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Cataracts are one of the most common eye problems affecting pets.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Use these five clues from AAHA to help you understand your pet’s body language and if they may be hiding their pain.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics
Read about weight loss methods and information to reduce your pets’ chance of tearing ligaments, wearing down their joints and avoiding pain.
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Relevant to Dogs
Lifelong diet of dog food formulated for weight loss helps formerly obese dogs keep the weight off.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Tips for taking care of your pets hair and skin.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
The syptoms, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of ear infections.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics Relevant to Small Mammals
Not only can exercise extend your furry friends’ lives; it may also expend some of their nervous energy and make them a little less likely to chew on the living room drapes.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Small Mammals
How you can protect your family and pet from these common parasites.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Ignoring the content of your pet’s food and need for exercise can lead to dangerous habits that may haunt you and your pet in the future.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
How to win the war against fleas.
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Relevant to Dogs

Unlike most human influenzas, canine flu is not seasonal — it can occur at any time of the year. Canine influenza virus (CIV) was first detected in 2004 in racing greyhounds in Florida. Investigators learned that this new canine influenza developed when an equine influenza virus adapted to infect dogs. This was the first time that an equine influenza virus had been found to “jump” from horses to dogs.


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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Why heavy isn’t healthy for people or pets.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats

Are you certain that your dog is protected from heartworm this season?

Although heartworm prevention techniques, including mosquito avoidance and drugs that kill heartworm larvae, have been recommended for years, the number of dogs diagnosed with heartworm continues to increase. One factor that contributes to the persistence of this preventable disease is “prophylactic failure,” which means that animals develop the disease even though they received a prophylactic drug to prevent heartworm for at least 1 year or season.


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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
With help from you and your veterinarian, your dog can live a long and happy life with hip dysplasia.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics Relevant to Birds Relevant to Small Mammals
Most people know that wild animals can give rabies to people, but what they may not realize is that pets like cats, dogs and birds can pass diseases to people. That may sound scary, but prevention isn’t all that hard. Here’s what to know about keeping pets and people safe from each other.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Your awareness of worms and other parasites can help your pet stay healthy.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Heartworms—can you imagine actually having worms in your heart? Not a pleasant thought, but that’s exactly where they are. Heartworm disease is one of the major health problems affecting dogs in the United States, and it is now being found in cats. The disease develops when a pet becomes infected with parasites transmitted through the bite of an infected mosquito.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
There is more to caring for a diabetic pet than just administering insulin. Pet owners must also carefully monitor their dog or cat at home, tracking basic data each day, such as amount of food and water consumed, amount of insulin administered and more. In addition, a pet owner must also develop a keen eye and awareness, so he or she can recognize slight changes in a pet’s behavior or habits. These changes may mean the pet is at risk, and the insulin dose needs adjustment.

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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics Relevant to Birds Relevant to Small Mammals

Your Pet Needs Water Too!When it comes to your pet’s food, you spend a lot of time and energy making sure that your pet has a healthy diet. You consider all of the brands, compare labels, debate moist-versus-dry, and consult your veterinarian.

But pets do not live by food alone. An ever-present bowl of clean water may be the most important part of your pet’s diet.


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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics
Learn to manage your pet’s pain to help your furry friend live longer.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats

Is your cat grooming half of her hair off, or is your dog licking his paws raw? It may well be that your pet is experiencing allergies, one of the most common health problems for pets. Just like people, animals have allergic reactions because their immune system — the system that protects the body from foreign and potentially infectious substances — overreacts to some material. Almost anything — pollen, dust, an ingredient in pet food, a household chemical, an insect bite — can set off an alarm in the immune system, causing it to pump out large amounts of white blood cells, hormones and other material called histamines into the bloodstream.


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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Diabetes mellitus, the medical name for diabetes, is a disease caused by a lack of insulin, or the inability of the body to utilize the insulin properly, that affects the level of glucose, or sugar, in your dog or cat’s blood.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics Relevant to Small Mammals
Ralph Schickel, DVM, MBA, with Hill’s Pet Nutrition talks to Steve Dale about ways to curb pet obesity.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Exotics Relevant to Birds Relevant to Small Mammals
Pets age at a much faster rate than people.  So when you think about how important it is for us to be seen regularly by a doctor, it’s even more important for our pets—especially if they are on medication.  Pets age five to seven times faster than we do. This makes having your pet examined at least once a year or more frequently before having prescriptions refilled the logical and right thing to do.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Information about the contagious disease ringworm.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
The diagnosis and treatments of common diseases and conditions affecting the skin.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Humans aren’t the only ones who suffer from allergies - plants, grasses and flowers can trigger allergic reactions called atopy in pets.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Small Mammals

Beware: Though a flea is puny, its effects on pets and people can be mighty. Learn more about their bad habits and health consequences--and why you should talk to your veterinarian about keeping your pet flea-free all year long.


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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Small Mammals
Learn more about their bad habits and health consequences.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
It’s always important to be on the lookout for ticks on your dog or cat, especially in the summer months when you and your pets are more active outside. Learn more about these parasites and why it’s important to keep your furry friends tick-free.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats

You have finally mustered the nerve to carry out the task you’ve been dreading all week. Nail clippers in hand, you hunt for Fido throughout the house. “I got him. He’s over here,” shouts your spouse. The two of you conspire to hold the struggling Cocker Spaniel down to give him a toenail trim, but after just seconds, you both give up.


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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
Diabetes is a treatable disease, but it does require a continued commitment from the pet owner since most diabetic dogs and cats need daily or twice daily insulin injections. Learn more about what insulin is, why it takes a while to determine how much insulin your pet needs, how to store and administer insulin and more.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats

Did you know dogs and cats can develop diabetes? When a pet is diabetic, it means it lacks the hormone insulin or is unable to use the insulin it has. Without insulin, the pet’s body can’t transport glucose (blood sugar) to cells where it is needed. When this happens, the cells begin to look for new sources of energy, and problems develop. Learn more about the disease and what types of pets are more likely to develop diabetes.


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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats Relevant to Small Mammals

How many times can a flea jump without stopping?

  1. 30,000
  2. 1,000,000
  3. Fleas jump?

How many times can a flea bite in one day?

  1. 125 times
  2. 40 times
  3. 1 time, but really hard

What is the best way to get rid of fleas on my pet?

  1. Use a veterinary-grade product to kill adult fleas
  2. Use a growth inhibitor to prevent fleas from maturing
  3. Vacuum, vacuum, vacuum

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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats
The signs and steps you can take at home to decrease the incidence of UTIs.
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Relevant to Dogs Relevant to Cats

Von Willebrand disease is the most common inherited bleeding disorder in dogs. The disease rarely occurs in cats.

Dogs with this disease cannot clot blood normally, which results in bleeding, especially after surgery or trauma. While this disease has occurred in more than 50 different dog breeds, the breeds most commonly affected include Doberman pinschers, German shepherds, golden retrievers, poodles, Shetland sheepdogs, Pembroke Welsh Corgis and the German Shorthaired Pointer.


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Relevant to Dogs

Walk your way to health with your best friendResolving to lose weight? Exercise with your dog!


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