The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Retirement Home for Elderly Dogs Opens in Japan - $1,000 Per Month

A pet company in Japan has opened a nursing home for older dogs which will provide round-the-clock vet care, a specialist guy, and even a swimming pool!  This is offered as a positive option for families with older pets that can be harder to care for.  Hopefully, this will keep people from just abandoning their older dogs, or putting them down.

Aeonpet Co., which is a subsidiary of the Aeon supermarket chain, is the company responsible for starting the idea.  The first site is opening at a shopping mall east of Tokyo, and has spots for an initial intake of 20 dogs.

“We decided to open the nursing facility because so many dog owners have requested something like this,” said Nanako Oiishi, a spokesperson for the company.

“Many Japanese people have pets now, but of course they get old and it can be difficult to care for them.”

Along with having vet services with a dedicated doctor on call at all times, there is a large grooming room, and owners will be able to stay with their animals as they live out the last days of their lives in comfort and luxury.

The care will also incorporate some services offered at the company’s luxury pet hotel at Tokyo's Narita Airport, including an hourly room temperature check and webcam so owners can look in on dogs day and night.

Prices will vary depending on the size and type of canine, although the company expects it will set the average owner back about $1,000 per month.

Aeonpet’s president said his intention is to use the first dog retirement home as a method to establish a second to none and available nowhere else.  They also hope to “establish an industry standard” in care for our older pets.

“We hope to eventually expand operations nationwide,” Akihiro Ogawa, Aeonpet’s president, said.

Aeonpet is already the largest pet company in Japan.  There are more than 170 stores, and 59 hospitals for pets in operation throughout the country.

Improved living conditions and health services for animals mean that the majority are living far longer than in the past, while new laws that went into effect in Japan last year make it a legal obligation for pet owners to take care of their animals until they die.






Back To School Affects Our Pets: Here's How You Can Help

It's that time of year. The weather will soon start cooling down, our children will be back in school, and we have to say goodbye to our relaxing summer days.

Right now is an incredibly busy time for parents. Back to school shopping, getting our kids back on an early bedtime routine and what have you. During all this, one thing often gets overlooked. Our pets. Believe it or not, they feel the stress of changes around them. Dogs especially get so used to routine, and having their mini humans home with them every day. And they love it. So when all that comes to a quick halt, our dogs feel that. Some will even get upset about it. 

To read more on this story, click here: Back To School Affects Our Pets: Here's How You Can Help

Tips on Keeping Your Dog’s Coat Healthy

Anyone with a furry friend can tell you that keeping up with a dog’s shedding is a full-time job.  Some dogs can grow 100 feet of fur per day...that’s adding up all the new strands covering the entire animal end-to-end, including the fluff between your dog’s toes. So it’s easy to see why taking care of your dog’s coat can sometimes seem overwhelming. But all that fluff’s got real substance! You may not know it, but your dog’s fur:



  • Is eight times warmer than wool 
  • Is fire-resistant
  • Wards off dirt
  • Repels static
  • Protects from parasites

So how do you keep your dog’s coat healthy and handsome? Use these tips and tricks from the experts! 

A Healthy Diet
Like humans, dogs are only as healthy as what they eat, says Michael Weiss, a veterinarian at All Creatures Veterinary Care Center in Sewell, N.J. Two things to look for in your dog’s food:

Protein
If your dog lacks this vital nutrient, its body will dedicate protein to muscle first, leaving its fur and skin dry and dull. Make sure your dog’s food is rich in protein. Omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids. These essential building blocks keep your dog’s coat healthy, thick and lustrous. They may also help reduce itching, dandruff and allergy-related skin problems. On the ingredients panel, look for fish oil, fish meal or flax, all excellent sources of omega-3 fatty acids.

Exercise
Exercise not only keeps your dog slim, it may also help keep her fur in top condition. Weiss says regular exercise benefits your dog’s overall health -- and a healthy dog is more likely to have a healthy, shiny coat.

Grooming
The fact is you can’t keep your dog from shedding. But with a few key products and techniques, you can easily take great care of your dog’s coat at home to keep it looking its best:

Brush at least once a week. In order to keep your dog’s mane manageable, give the fur one good brush each week with a de-shedding brush to get out the undercoat, says New York City-based groomer Lisa Caputo from the dog service company Biscuits and Bath. Part the hair and brush from the skin out to avoid matting, moisture and heat build-up, which can cause yeast and bacteria. For an even slicker look, give your dog a quick brush every day. Bathe with gentle shampoos and conditioners. If your dog has sensitive skin, try a hypoallergenic or oatmeal shampoo. It is recommended that you wash your pooch every four weeks.

Medical Checkups
If you notice your dog has consistently itchy, uncomfortable skin or is shedding more than usual, your best bet is to take him to a veterinarian. It could be something as small as a food allergy to a more serious problem, like ringworm.

Cat Scratch Disease - Do You Know What It Is?

Cat scratch disease (CSD) is a bacterial infection caused by the bartonella henselae bacterium. The bacteria can be carried in a cat's saliva and is usually contracted by being bitten or scratched by a cat. The cats probably get it from fleas, but this has not been established. CSD is an opportunistic infection that is usually not serious for patients with healthy immune systems.

About 40% of cats carry the bacteria in their saliva at some point in their lives, cats that carry Bartonella henselae do not themselves show any signs of illness. Most people contract the disease after being scratched or bitten by a cat.


Since these bacteria may also be present on cat fur, it is possible to contract the disease from petting a cat and then rubbing your eyes. Kittens are more likely than older cats to carry the bacteria and to transmit the infection to humans. Sometimes people who get cat scratch disease do not recall ever being scratched or bitten by a cat.


Symptoms

A person who has had contact with an infected cat may show common symptoms, including:
  • Bump (papule) or blister (pustule) at site of injury (usually the first sign)
  • Fatigue
  • Fever (in some patients)
  • Headache
  • Lymph node swelling (lymphadenopathy) near the site of the scratch or bite
  • Overall discomfort (malaise)
  • Less common symptoms may include:
  • Loss of appetite
  • Sore throat
  • Weight loss

Shelter in Hurricane’s Path Warns it Will Euthanize Animals if it Can’t Find People to Adopt Them

Kevin Raffee had waited until nearly the last minute. His wife, Julie Lamacchia, had already left their seaside home in Wilmington, N.C.

But on Wednesday morning, the “life-threatening” force of Hurricane Florence churned closer, and it was time to leave.

So Raffee started packing the nine-foot moving van in the driveway — dubbed the “Fluffy Bus” — with what really counted: nearly two dozen cats and dogs the couple saved from possible euthanasia.

For many pets that have been left behind or abandoned after their owners fled this coastal county and surrounding communities, the final days before the storm hits could mean life or death.

[These cats and dogs were moved to safety as Hurricane Florence bears down on the East Coast]

Local, government-run animal shelters were filling up fast, and in many jurisdictions, such as Pender County, shelters that hit capacity must “make space,” Jewel Horton, manager of Pender County Animal Shelter, told The Washington Post on Wednesday.

To read more on this story, click here: Shelter in Hurricane’s Path Warns it Will Euthanize Animals if it Can’t Find People to Adopt Them


Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Abandoned by Their Parents, Baby Flamingo Take Their First Steps at the Prague Zoo

Baby flamingos who were abandoned by their parents have been learning to walk around the Prague zoo. This will help to socialized so they can easily reintegrate with the rest of the flock.

For Years Dogs Have Been Called Man's Best Friend - Study Shows That Cats May Be The Real Best Friend

A new study suggests that the bond between cats and their owners is far more intense than imagined...particularly for cat-loving women. Apparently cats remember and return kindness, and they have a strong influence on their owners. Are you surprised, or does this seem like common sense?

It's an unfortunate truth that many people think that the only reason cats act affectionate toward humans is to meet their own selfish needs. But a new study reveals what most Catsters already know: Cats attach to their people as social partners, not just the person who feeds them.

The research, which has been accepted for publication in the journal Behavioural Process, suggests that the bond between cats and their owners is far more intense than imagined -- particularly for cat-loving women.

The study is the first to show in detail that the dynamics underlying cat-human relationships are nearly identical to human-only bonds.

"Food is often used as a token of affection, and the ways that cats and humans relate to food are similar in nature to the interactions seen between the human caregiver and the pre-verbal infant," co-author Jon Day, a Waltham Centre for Pet Nutrition researcher, said. "Both cat and human infant are, at least in part, in control of when and what they are fed!"

The study, led by Kurt Kotrschal of the Konrad Lorenz Research Station and the University of Vienna, was conducted by videotaping and analyzing the interaction between 41 cats and their owners over long, four-part periods.

Owner and cat personalities were assessed in by separate tests before the videotaping began. In the cat assessment, the authors put a stuffed owl toy with large eyes on a floor so the animal would encounter it by surprise.

The research showed that cats and their owners had a strong influence on one another; in fact, they often controlled each other's behaviors. Extroverted women with young, active cats enjoyed the greatest synchronicity. Cats in these relationships only had to use subtle cues like a single upright tall move to show they wanted friendly contact.

While there are plenty of men who love cats, and cats who love men, this study and other research reveal that women interact with their cats more than men do.

Cats also seem to remember kindness and return it to their owners. If a person complies with their cat's wishes to interact, the cat will often comply with the owner's wishes at other times. The cat may "have an edge in this negotiation," since owners are usually already motivated to establish social contact.

"A relationship between a cat and a human can involve mutual attraction, personality compatibility, ease of interaction, play, affection and social support," co-author Dorothy Gracey of the University of Vienna explained. "A human and a cat can mutually develop complex ritualized interactions that show substantial mutual understanding of each other's inclinations and preferences."

What do you think? Cats vs. Dogs as man's best friend.



Study Shows that Pets Accidentally Ingesting Medical Marijuana and Going to the Emergency Room has Quadrupled Since 2005

Northwest Portland residents Ginger McCarthy and her husband, Michael, spent what they thought was a perfect day at Mill Pond Park on Sunday with their standard poodle, Coco.

That is, until after a few hours after they returned home and Coco began to act strangely. The dog looked dazed, her movements were jerky and she had trouble walking. “She looked like she was having a seizure,” McCarthy says.

At DoveLewis Emergency Animal Hospital that evening, McCarthy was shocked to discover that her show-quality poodle was exhibiting the classic signs of marijuana ingestion – especially after Coco released her bladder on the lobby floor.

Oregon and Washington veterinarians recognize those distinctive symptoms with increasingly frequency, as marijuana ingestion becomes more common at their clinics.

DoveLewis has seen marijuana-related toxicity cases increase from about 11 percent of all toxicity cases in 2011 to nearly 20 percent in 2012 and the first few months of 2013, says communications director Kate Goudschaal. The hospital treated eight cases last month.

At Tanasbourne Veterinary Emergency, Dr. Shawn Thomas estimates he treats at least one to two cases each weekend and about 20 or 30 cases in the last two years – and that’s likely a low estimate.

“There are very specific clinical signs,” says DoveLewis staff veterinarian Dr. MeiMei Welker. “They’ll walk in, and we can almost diagnose it by the way that they look. They’re having trouble walking, almost like they’re drunk, and they’re really sensitive to any kind of stimulation.”

Dribbling urine is also a telltale sign.

Dogs can get sick from ingesting it in any form, Welker says, from marijuana leaves (which are less potent) to “bud butter.”

McCarthy isn’t sure exactly what Coco ingested at the park; all she saw were breadcrumbs, so she suspects Coco consumed either the remains of marijuana-infused baked goods or cigarette butts.

Treatment

Typical treatment involves inducing vomiting, if the dog arrives to the hospital soon enough after ingestion, to remove as much of the substance from the dog’s system as possible.

Veterinarians may then treat with intravenous fluids and activated charcoal, which binds to the THC and helps prevent further absorption.

Complications can arise if a dog consumes enough marijuana to make it vomit, Welker says. If it’s sedated, it runs the risk of suffering from aspiration pneumonia, which happens when vomit is inhaled into the lungs.

“Most of the patients are going to do pretty well, even with minimal treatment, but we do get patients that come in nearly comatose and with a low heart rate,” says Dr. Jonathan Wisniewski, a relief veterinarian at Emergency Veterinary Clinic of Tualatin.

The severity of the reaction is generally dose-dependent, he says.

Wisniewski, who is also an associate veterinarian at the Emergency Veterinary Hospital and Animal Urgent Care in Eugene, has done extensive research on a relatively new therapy for treating severe marijuana toxicity called intravenous lipid emulsion therapy.

The treatment involves injecting fat droplets that bind to the fat-soluble THC and help leach it out of the bloodstream, allowing the animal to excrete it more quickly.

Marijuana toxicity in Washington

Even before Washington voters legalized the possession of marijuana in November, pot has been among the top toxins at Olympia Pet Emergency in Olympia, Wash., says medical director Dr. Blair Burggren.

“I would say it’s safe to assume we get at least one call a day on a dog that either ingested or potentially ingested it,” he says.

Since it was legalized for recreational use, he has noticed a slight increase, primarily in the ingestion of products containing marijuana or THC, such as baked goods.

Statewide, the legalization doesn’t seem to have had a huge impact – yet – on pot ingestion in pets.

“I do anticipate it coming down the pike,” says Dr. Donna Mensching, veterinary medical director of Veterinary Poison Emergency Treatment Services, a service of the Washington Poison Center.

She believes it will become more of an issue once the substance is legal to sell.

Mensching is concerned about the impact of “medibles” – the cannabis-containing foods that might seem very tempting to dogs. They may consume higher amounts of the substance because it’s in a tasty treat, and the food may contain additional toxins, such as chocolate.

“The thing about dogs is that they have no stop button,” she says. “They will eat as much as they can of something and as quickly as possible.”

She also worries that once marijuana is sold legally, it might open the market for higher-end versions of the drug, which will likely contain higher contents of THC.

If there is an upside to the legalization, Mensching hopes that it will remove the fear or embarrassment people may have to admitting that their dog ingested pot.

Veterinarians say it’s much better to be forthright so they can treat your pet properly.

There are other conditions that may cause similar symptoms, such as neurological disease or brain tumors, so disclosing that information may save expensive diagnostics such as blood work or an MRI.

“We only want to know for medical reasons. We don’t report them,” Welker says (adding that they won’t judge, either). “It can really simplify things if they come forward with that information.”

If you do suspect that your pet has ingested marijuana, you should have a veterinarian check it out just to be safe.

And like any toxin, please keep it out of reach of pets.

“Just because the voters of Washington agreed that marijuana is now legalized and acceptable does not mean that it’s safe for your pet,” Burggren says. “Make sure you’re careful and keep it locked up.”

Tips:


  • If you suspect your pet ingested pot, don’t try to induce vomiting at home. The hydrogen peroxide people sometimes use to cause vomiting can irritate the stomach lining and cause even more vomiting, putting your pet at risk for gastroenteritis.
  • Keep any medical marijuana in a drawer or somewhere out of reach of pets.
  • If you do suspect your pet has induced marijuana, call a veterinarian.

     Dogs that get into their owner's medical marijuana stash can become very sick — even die, vets say.


                          Marijuana-enhanced baked goods can be a danger to pets.