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Pet Contests Syracuse NY

A snake that swallowed a rabbit and an electric blanket takes the top prize of a radiograph contest this year, but the X-ray submissions featuring odd items consumed by cats and dogs made for some stiff competition. Entries to Veterinary Practice News' annual "They ate WHAT?" contest included a cat who ate a needle and thread as well as a dog who ingested a stuffed toy dog.

Liverpool Animal Health Center
(315) 944-0939
8205 Oswego Road
Liverpool, NY
Cicero Animal Clinic
(315) 277-9788
8803 Brewerton Road Route 11
Brewerton, NY
Lyncourt Veterinary Hospital
(315) 455-7417
2306 Court St
Syracuse, NY
Jensen, Lisa, Dvm - Town & Country Hospital-Pets
(315) 469-5777
4707 S Salina St
Syracuse, NY
North Syracuse Animal Hospital
(315) 458-4610
900 N Main St
North Syracuse, NY
VCA Shop City Animal Hospital
(315) 464-0916
105 Shop City Plaza
Syracuse, NY
South Shore Veterinary Hospital
(315) 503-1983
6255 State Route 31
Cicero, NY
Jeff Vogel, DVM, DACVD
315-446-7933
5841 Bridge Street Suite 200
East Syracuse, NY
Liverpool Village Animal Hospital
(315) 451-5455
6770 Onondaga Lake Pkwy
Liverpool, NY
Wallace, Thea M, Dvm - Mattydale Animal Hospital
(315) 455-5915
2703 Brewerton Rd # 2
Mattydale, NY
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Dogs Ingest the Strangest Things

An X-ray revealed that Labrador
Retriever Murphy had swallowed
a small, stuffed toy dog.

A snake that swallowed a rabbit and an electric blanket takes the top prize of a radiograph contest this year, but the X-ray submissions featuring odd items consumed by cats and dogs made for some stiff competition. Entries to Veterinary Practice News’ annual “They ate WHAT?” contest included a cat who ate a needle and thread as well as a dog who ingested a stuffed toy dog.

The dog, a 2-year-old Labrador Retriever named Murphy, had a history of eating socks. He usually was able to pass them on his own. This time, he was in trouble.

An acute onset of vomiting and a decreased appetite were the first signs that something was wrong with Murphy. Veterinarians noted his abdomen was tense during a physical examination.

Radiographs revealed a cloth-like foreign object in his stomach, and “tailing” into the first part of the small intestine. A small, stuffed toy dog was taken out endoscopically.

The radiographs of Murphy, submitted by Elizabeth Boland, North Carolina State University, were named the winners in the student category. The grand prize winner in the professional category was Gregory Rich, DVM, West Esplanade Veterinary Clinic in Metairie, La.

Both win single-lens reflex digital cameras. The annual contest is sponsored by Eklin Medical Systems of Santa Clara, Calif.

Brittany Shaw, a technician at Atwood Animal Hospital in Rhode Island sent in a skul...

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