Holiday Hazards for Pets

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It’s the most wonderful time of the year until your pet becomes sick and you have to rush to a veterinarian. Before you deck the halls, make sure your home is safe for your four-legged friends.

Holiday Tinsel and Ornaments
Tinsel, while not toxic, is very attractive to pets, particularly cats. The problem with tinsel is that once it’s consumed, it can cause serious injury to your pet. If not caught in time, this foreign body ingestion could actually be fatal, as it twists and bunches inside your pet’s intestines. Immediate veterinary care is required.

Holiday Lighting and Candles
Got a pet that likes to chew? Electrical shock may occur when a pet chomps down on an electrical cord, causing tongue lacerations and possible death. Consider using LED candles instead of actual flames and place them in a hard-to-reach spot so that your pets cannot access them.

Gift Wrap Ribbon
You may be tempted to fashion your pet with a decorative ribbon “collar”, but be aware that this could become a choking hazard.

Food Hazards
Festive events often mean edible treats – and lots of them. Unfortunately, some of the most popular holiday goodies, such as chocolate, bones, and nuts, can be extremely toxic or fatal to pets. Artificial sweeteners are also toxic so make sure your furry friends don’t taste your holiday baked goods.

If you’d like to make pet-friendly treats, log onto the SCRAPS website. They have recipes that are good for them.

Toxic Holiday Plants
They may be pretty, but some holiday plants are poisonous – even deadly.

  • Christmas tree pine needles can produce oral irritation, vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, trembling, and posterior weakness.
  • Holly, commonly found during the Christmas season, can cause intense vomiting, diarrhea, and depression.
  • Mistletoe, another Christmas plant, can cause significant vomiting, diarrhea, difficulty breathing, collapse, erratic behavior, hallucinations, and death if ingested.
  • Poinsettias can cause irritation to the mouth and stomach and sometimes vomiting.

A Full House
If you are expecting visitors for the holidays, remember to give your pet some time and space to get used to the hustle and bustle.

The Best Gift
Don’t forget to get your pet licensed and micro-chipped! The holidays won’t be very merry for you or your pet if they are lost out in the cold.

 

 

SOURCE – SCRAPS release, December 2016