First published May 2019<\/p>\n
Not all dog toys are safe for all dogs.<\/p>\n
The shape of a dog’s mouth can make a very safe toy into a highly dangerous one.<\/p>\n
This is especially an issue for dogs like Boxers and pugs and other flat-faced wide mouth (Brachycephalic) breeds of dogs.<\/p>\n
The pink pig toy, featured below, is suspected as the possible cause for why an adult healthy Pug suddenly experienced two distressing episodes of ‘fainting’ or collapse over a 24-hour period. The signs were similar to what happens when Boxers play with tennis balls and the ball closes off the Boxer’s airway, causing the dog to collapse.<\/a><\/p>\n
3)\u00a0Sticks<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n
Dogs love chasing sticks and we love throwing them. However, when the dog runs onto the stick and injuries the soft tissues of the mouth and throat, serious damage can occur. These injuries can be a nightmare to heal, as tiny splinters can work their way through the dog’s body. The splinters are impossible to find and easily remove, so the dogs often need to be sent to specialist centres with advanced imaging equipment needed to track down these tiny foreign bodies. What was a cheap free toy, suddenly becomes very expensive to have used. Kong makes a series of artificial cloth and rubber sticks that bend if the dog lands heavily on it, so protecting the dog from injury. The rubber sticks also float well in water. We have some of these style of\u00a0 sticks in stock at the clinic 04\/2020<\/p>\n
4) Hollow Toys<\/strong> that can trap jaws and tongues.<\/p>\n
Many thanks to Georgie Moody from the UK for allow our clinic to share photographs of her wonderful dog Dudley’s run in with a hollow bone toy so we could share and warn others.<\/a> <\/a> Dudley was 6 years old in these photos. They have no idea how he did it, one minute he was chewing the bone and the next he’d somehow got it wedged as in Photo 1. Dudley was absolutely fine after his vet removed the bone under sedation: Photo 2.<\/p>\n