Presumably.How does this doggy toothbrush look, and, does he need toothpaste or would that just contribute to the possible food allergy?
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Presumably.How does this doggy toothbrush look, and, does he need toothpaste or would that just contribute to the possible food allergy?
They were!? I didn’t know that!Chewy was bought by Petco and is the dumps now ☹
WE mostly feed uncooked. If someone feeds him a cooked bone we take it away before he can really eat it. We let him lick cooked bones but no teat them.Just so you know cooked bones, especially cooked chicken bones, are really not a good idea. They can easily splinter and get stuck in the throat or the intestines. If you want to feed bones, raw bones are best as they are far softer and more pliable. Cooked bones are dangerous for dogs.
Maybe we will just rub some salmon skin form dinner not eh tooth brush so it tasted good. I don want to feed him a bunch of preservatives. Here is the link to a toothbrush I liked!Yes, and exactly these tooth pastes contain lots of artificial flavours and stuff that can trigger allergies.
That’s good at least! I wasn’t sure cause you said you feed him the leftover ones or I thought hahaWE mostly feed uncooked. If someone feeds him a cooked bone we take it away before he can really eat it. We let him lick cooked bones but no teat them.
have you tried a raw diet?We have a 5 year old yellow lab pup. He is such a good boy and loves running on trail rides with us and the horses, and chasing a stick. He has recently developed a limp, when he gets up in the morning, and after we run him on the trails sometimes. We took him to the vet and they told us he had tendonidouse. We kept him as chill as possible for 2 weeks, but nothing changed. We then noticed he had a hot spot on his shoulder, and he was continually chewing his paws.
We have done research, and are thinking a food allergy may be the cause of this. He also have and ear infection that is being difficult to get rid of. Apparently, paw chewing, hot spots, and ear infections are all signs of a food allergy. We want to figure out how to find his possible allergen without taking him to the vet to get a bunch of testing done. We are thinking of trying to find him a hypoallergenic or limited ingredient dog food and then eliminating and reintroducing ingredients to find his allergen. Does anyone know a food brand that we could use that isn't to pricey? We think his limp is because he is chewing his paws all night because of the itch, and then they hurt in the morning, and when he runs because he is chewing them so much. Any advice is appreciated, and if any of you have had this issue before and would like to offer your opinion please do. Thanks so much, Avery
I did as well, but my dog didn’t chew the bones with his back molars, and he got an infection that ate into the bone. His front teeth were great, and the back ones didn’t look bad, but then the vet found it had made a cavity between the teeth. We went to get Christmas photos of my kids at the mall, we were gone 2 hours, and I came home to so much blood, I thought someone got shot and broke in to escape being caught (I was living in a building with a broken front gate in Brooklyn so that was more likely than what had actually happened). My bulldog had ruptured an infection that went dangerously close to a major vein or artery, and he had freaked out when it happened and the skin between the two broke and he was bleeding out through the tooth. He miraculously survived and the vet said we were lucky that it must have happened just before we got home. I’m 50/50 on whether I blame myself, I should have brushed his teeth, but the vet should have noticed this at his regular checkups, and just removed the tooth at the start. But the moral is, he had eaten raw through much of his life and did really well on it, but I couldn’t store raw food for 3 dogs in a city apartment. I applaud people who feed raw, it’s great and natural. Just brush their teeth. Compared to actually researching and preparing raw, toothbrushing is easy.Feeding raw meaty bones will help with this. Most people that feed raw account for the teeth and give them bones and/or necks to chew to clean them.
That has recently been discounted.And look up the list of 'grain free' diets that have been implicated in heart failure in some dogs, before deciding to use one of them.
Mary