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Intestinal Surgery Fresno CA

Unless you can cure your dog of his paper-eating ways, he may be headed toward intestinal surgery at a great financial expense to you. So you'd better keep paper out your dog's reach to stop this dangerous habit.

Pet Medical Center & Spa
(559) 492-8976
621 W Fallbrook Ave
Fresno, CA
Thomas P. Lewis II, DVM, DACVD
(559) 486-0520
Veterinary Emergency Service 1639 N. Fresno Street
Fresno, CA
Hart, Carol, Dvm - Cedar Veterinary Hospital
(559) 251-7141
1602 N Cedar Ave
Fresno, CA
Abbey Pet Hospital
(559) 442-1127
4508 E Ashlan Ave
Fresno, CA
Valley Animal Center
(559) 233-8690
3934 N. Hayston
Fresno, CA
Sunnyside Pet Hospital
(559) 492-7926
5726 E Kings Canyon Rd
Fresno, CA
Madera Animal Hospital
(559) 481-1955
16772 Road 26
Madera, CA
Brewer, Rene, Dvm - Abby Pet Hospital
(559) 442-1127
445 N Abby St
Fresno, CA
Cedar Veterinary Hospital
(559) 251-7141
1602 N Cedar Ave
Fresno, CA
Olive Veterinary Hospital
(559) 255-0698
4677 E Olive Ave
Fresno, CA
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Eating Paper Is Bad for Dog's Health

Q. We have a 3-year-old Golden Retriever mix who started eating toilet paper, napkins and paper towels about six months ago. He’s absolutely obsessed with eating them. We have scolded him, sprayed paper with the bitter products, and tried tough love. While I was in another room for five minutes today, he got on the table and ate about 100 napkins from the napkin holder. Why is he so hooked on paper? Is it just obsessive behavior? What can we do to stop him? Is this excessive paper eating harmful to him?

A. Unless you can cure your dog of his paper-eating ways, he may be headed toward intestinal surgery at a great financial expense to you. As much as I like the idea of you keeping the economy going and partly subsidizing the veterinary profession, you need to address this issue more directly.
 
Of special concern is bathroom trash: sanitary napkins and paper towels are notorious for getting lodged in dogs’ intestines, causing a blockage that requires surgery to correct. Hopefully, by the time you read this, the 100 napkins he ate will have successfully passed through his digestive tract.
 
From a practical standpoint, deny your dog access to any paper products. This will be inconvenient for you since all napkins and toilet paper will have to be kept behind doors or up higher than he can reach. (I assume he goes up on counters and tables to get his goods.) Unless you are willing to monitor your dog 100 percent of the time, this is your only choice...

Author: By Jon Geller, DVM

Copyright 2009 BowTie Inc.

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