Bloat - Symptoms to watch for and information on how to help prevent bloat*
*But please note, that there is no guarantee bloat will not occur reguardless of taking all precautions. Bloat can occur in any deep chested dog and the standard poodle is included.
Summary of Signs and Symptoms of Gastric Dilation and Torsion Complex
At home give GAS X immediately, call the closest Vet and take your dog there immediately.
Researchers at Purdue University performed a major study on bloat in dogs. Study results determined that there were some steps that dog owners can do to help prevent bloat. These steps are:
- Excessive salivation and drooling
- Attempts to vomit or pass stool
- Extreme restlessness
- Evidence of abdominal pain
- Distended abdomen
- Seeking a hiding place
- Rigid [hard] abdomen
- Looking at their side
- Abdomen painful when touched
- Vomiting foamy or liquid material
- Arched back
- Unproductive vomiting or retching
- Praying position [down in front, rear standing]
- Aerophagia [frequent swallowing]
- Laying down on belly - crouched position
- Hypersalivation [drooling heavily]
- Curling up in a ball
- Drinking excessively
- Laying or sitting in an unusual location
- Lack of appetite
- Panting, breathing rapidly or heavily
- Quiet, any abnormal behavior
- Red or white gums [not normal pink]
At home give GAS X immediately, call the closest Vet and take your dog there immediately.
- There are several steps to saving a bloated dogs life. Part of the problem is that all steps should be done at the same time and as quickly as possible.
- The huge stomach is by now pressing on the major blood vessels carrying blood back to the heart. This stops normal circulation and sends the dog into shock. Making matters worse, the stomach tissue is dying because it is stretched too tightly to allow blood circulation through it. There can be no recovery until the stomach is untwisted and the gas released. A stomach tube and stomach pump are generally used for this but sometime surgery is needed to achieve stomach decompression.
- Intravenous catheters are placed and life-giving fluid solutions are rushed in to replace the blood that cannot get past the bloated stomach to return to the heart. The intense pain associated with this disease causes the heart rate to race at such a high rate that heart failure will result. medication to resolve the pain is needed if the patient’s heart rate is to slow down. Medication for shock, antibiotics and electrolytes are all vital in stabilizing the patient.
- There is a special very dangerous rhythm problem, called a "premature ventricular contraction" or "pvc," associated with bloat and it must be ruled out. If it is present, intravenous medications are needed to stabilize the rhythm. Since this rhythm problem may not be evident until even the next day continual EKG monitoring may be necessary. Disturbed heart rhythm already present at the beginning of treatment is associated with a 38% mortality rate.
- Getting the bloated dog's stomach decompressed and reversing the shock is an adventure in itself but the work is not yet half finished.
- All bloated dogs, once stable, should have surgery. Without surgery, the damage done inside cannot be assessed or repaired plus bloat may recur at any point, even within the next few hours and the above adventure must be repeated. Surgery, called gastropexy, allows the stomach to be tacked into normal position so that it may never again twist. Without gastropexy, the recurrence rate of bloat may be as high as 75%!
- Assessment of the internal damage is also very important to recovery. If there is a section of dying tissue on the stomach wall, this must be discovered and removed or the dog will die despite the heroics described above. Also, the spleen, which is located adjacent to the stomach may twist with the stomach. The spleen may require removal, too.
- If the tissue damage is so bad that part of the stomach must be removed, the mortality rate jumps to 28 - 38%.
- If the tissue damage is so bad that the spleen must be removed, the mortality rate is 32 - 38%.
- After the expense and effort of the stomach decompression, it is tempting to forgo the further expense of surgery. However, consider that the next time your dog bloats, you may not be there to catch it in time and, according the study described below, without surgery there is a 24% mortality rate and a 76% chance of re-bloating at some point. The best choice is to finish the treatment that has been started and have the abdomen explored. If the stomach can be surgically tacked into place, recurrence rate drops to 6%.
Researchers at Purdue University performed a major study on bloat in dogs. Study results determined that there were some steps that dog owners can do to help prevent bloat. These steps are:
- Divide the food into two or more smaller servings a day.
- Do not feed from a raised bowl. Feed from a bowl on the ground.
- Make sure that fat isn’t in the top four ingredients of the food you feed your dog.
- Do not feed an all dry food diet. Include wet foods or large meat chunks in the diet.
- Do not moisten dry food.
- Wait one hour before feeding and one to two hours after eating before letting your dog exercise or before going for walks, etc.
- For dry food, feed no more than one cup per thirty pounds of body weight per meal (divided between at least two meals).
- If your dog is a greedy eater and gulps its food, invest in a food dish that forces the dog to eat slower, such as the slow feeder or fun feeder.