The Quiet Winter Signs Your Pet Needs Help Before It’s Too Late

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Winter 2013 trouble in pets WT does not often come with a melodramatic climax. In most cases, it presents itself as a minor change that can be explained by the fact that they are cold or they are tired.

Cold illness is fast spreading and can also begin in areas that people do not consider to search such as the paws, ears, gums, breathing, and behavior. The most secure method is to observe the slight changes in the initial stage and view them as the cause of warming up, examining, and reaching out to a veterinarian.

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1. Shivering that starts suddenly or stops even though the pet is still cold

One of the most noticeable indications that a pet is having trouble trying to keep warm is shivering, particularly after spending some time outside in the snow, wind or wet weather. Dogs start to have hypothermia when the core temperature is lower than normal, and the initial symptoms may resemble shivering combined with low activity. The most noteworthy warning is the disappearance of shivering without the ability to keep a pet warm, and the given situation may become more perilous as the stores of energy are depleted. Any suspicion of hypothermia establishment between 98 and 99 F is an emergency treatment case.

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2. Lethargy, hiding, or “not quite themselves” behavior

Cold stress may appear in the form of personality change. The cats might retreat, cower more than normal, or appear particularly quiet; the dogs might become detached with play or lethargic during walks or they appear to be mentally elsewhere. Such changes are important since cats tend to hide signs of pain, and both hypothermia and frostbite may begin in the form of behavioral shifts when the most evident physical injuries are still visible. When lethargy appears with cold exposure, it is not a mood any longer, it is a hint.

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3. Pale gums or unusually cool ears, feet, or legs

In situations where the body is too cold, it keeps vital organs warm by cutting down circulation of blood to the extremities. In dogs, the pattern may be expressed in gums that are pale, and very cold limbs, despite the appearance of thick coat. Ears, paws and tail are the most exposed areas and how frostbite poses a risk in cats. Coolness will only occur temporarily but a combination of coolness and pallor will indicate the body is straining to keep the cold safe circulation going.

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4. Skin that looks pale, gray, or “different,” especially on ears, paws, or tail

Frostbite may have an insidious onset with skin turning pale, white or gray, with cold or hardness. This is followed by swelling and tenderness, and other cats respond by retreating or guarding a paw. Since frostbite may take a very short time, an early change of color particularly on a cat that has just gone outside or in a garage with no heating on should be considered an emergency.

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5. Blisters, ulcers, darkened tissue, or loss of sensation

They are not wait and see indicators. More severe frostbite may lead to existing blisters or open sores and tissue may become dark blue or black, which is a sign of extensive damage. Affected nerves also stop the response of some pets in the area to touch and this may make the injury appear less painful than it actually is. Veterinary treatment is necessary to check on the health of the tissues, prevent infection, and control the pain.

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6. Breathing that shifts from fast to slow and shallow

The breathing patterns may vary with the decrease in body temperature. In the case of dogs, it starts with fast breathing rates and then shifts to slow and shallow breathing as the situation deteriorates. This is more worrying when coupled with frailty, confusion or an animal that cannot comfortably stand or lie down. Since late-stage hypothermia may be fatal, abnormal breathing, following cold exposure, is an emergency.

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7. Disorientation, collapse, or a “not responding” moment

Pets might become disoriented, clumsy, or even indifferent when the cold affects the body in a way in which it cannot counteract it. In dogs, extreme hypothermia may also result in collapse and a slowing of the heartbeat and breathing rate, and just allowing the animal to sleep it off may be a waste of time. The most urgent step is to ensure that the pet is taken to a warm place, wrapped in dry blankets and taken to the veterinary immediately.

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8. A pet left outdoors (or roaming) during freezing weather

The danger intensifies when the animals are unsupervised and are not able to get heat particularly the puppies, kittens, old age, small pets, pets with light coats and those with disease or injury. Cats are also fooled by cold to get warm in hazardous locations; cats occasionally get underneath the hood of vehicles in order to get in touch with warm engines. The beginning approach to winter safety is reducing exposure; keeping companion animals indoors, minimizing time spent outdoors, and examining the paws, ears, and tails after any cold exposure.

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I would make no noise about it: quiet signs are music in winter. Whenever your pet becomes cuddly, colored, breathing or acting differently, the most prudent step is to assume that it is a time-sensitive matter and seek veterinary assistance.

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