HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Your cart
Cart is empty

|
 
Advanced Search
Beds & Bedding
Doggie Dining
Apparel & Accessories
Travel & Transport
Grooming
Indoor & Outdoor
Featured



DISCOUNT CLUB
Your Name:
Email Address:

Articles

Ask Your Veterinary Questions Before You Give Prescription Drugs To Your Dog

Monday, December 11, 2006 | Printer Friendly Printer Friendly


There is no doubt today’s modern drugs can surely be benefit to the practice of veterinary medicine. They have helped save lots of dogs lives many critically ill dogs and restored countless others to normal health. Yet improperly used, they cannot only fail in their intended function, but can actually create a more serious threat to your dog. An antibiotic given at haphazard and infrequent intervals can create a resistant strain of bacteria. A corticosteroid abruptly discontinued after long use can precipitate a dangerous adrenal gland hormone imbalance. A drug intended to be given four times a day may produce a dangerously high blood level if given, only twice a day, but at double the dose.

Make sure when your veterinarian dispenses or prescribes any medication for your dog, he or she should also give you the following information in addition to the dose and frequency. Do not hesitate to ask your vet any of the following questions:

1. What is the medication expected to do?
2. How soon can improvement be expected?
3. How long should you wait if there is no change in condition?
4. How long should the medication be continued?
5. Is the medicine to be stopped abruptly or is the dose to be reduced and how?
6. Does the medicine need special storage? Away from light? Refrigeration? Must it be kept airtight?
7. What possible side effects might be expected?

The dispensing label or prescription should carry specific directions for use with your dog and need to be followed explicitly. Is the medication to be given before or after or with food, or perhaps on an empty stomach which should remain empty for a specified time? Some medicines are inactivated by food, due to mechanical or chemical interference with their absorption from the stomach or small intestine.

If there is more than one type of medication, can they be given together, or is there a particular sequence of administration or time interval between them? Certain drugs interfere with each other when given together while others will intensify the reaction. The directions say "three times daily." Does that mean morning, noon, and night or breakfast, lunch, and supper or every eight hours? The effective levels in the blood of some medications fall more rapidly than others and require administration at regular and specific time intervals.

The prescribed tablet is quit large and not too easy to give it twice a day. Can you give ½ the tablet four time a day? For some drugs the answer is yes. For others
definitely not, because by doing so, you will render the drug ineffective. And you most certainly will want to know when to start giving the drug; when you get home, later that day, the next morning, or only if certain symptoms appear? Ask your Veterinary any and all questions you may have before leaving the examination room! This is especially important if the prescription is to be filled outside of the veterinary hospital.





<< Nutritional Dog Food For Yout Dogs Needs >>
 
AS SEEN ON..
featured in “Stump the Rach” segment, September 2007
12/22/08 issue, feature titled “Pamper Your Pooch”, page 22
March 2009 Issue, Small Business Edition, article titled “Lap of Luxury”, pages 89-90
Spring 2009 Issue, pictorial titled “Sleepless In Seattle”, inside back cover


GUARANTEES


Copyright © 2005-2010 Oh My Dog Supplies, LLC Printable version