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  1. #1
    Member el borracho's Avatar
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    Grass Seed Infections

    Gun Dog Health: Protect Your Hunting Dog From
    Grass Seed Infections
    - 2
    by Brian Lynn

    Of all the dangers to our dogs, grass seems like the most benign concerns a hunter could have to worry about. Wrong.

    Grasses like foxtail barley, cheatgrass, Canada wild rye and speargrass (needle & thread) produce some of the most hazardous mean seeds around.

    The seeds of these plants, some of which are planted as part of the CRP initiative, can be deadly to dogs. The shared characteristics of the seeds are what make them so dangerous: sharp, pointed tips with barbs pointing in the opposite direction of the pod’s main point. This barbed pod slowly works its way into a dog’s lungs, if inhaled, or into and through the skin, if lodged into the hair, eventually penetrating the skin’s surface and entering body the body cavity.

    The grasses are so prevalent that just about everyone in the United States is at risk to one degree or another. I know that the 5-acre field in front of my place is filled with cheatgrass. Both Kona and Hoss have had sneezing fits after inhaling the awns and I’ve picked cheatgrass awns out of Kona’s coat repeatedly; some so buried that only little wisps show of the main seed.

    The scary part when it comes to grass awns is that it’s a slow death. And death is a very real possibility. The grasses have to penetrate the surface, either by puncturing the skin and working their way inwards or by being inhaled, and then the body has to react to the intrusion.

    Unfortunately, the body reacts the same way it does for other health problems, including tick-borne illnesses, cancers, pneumonia and fungal infections among them. While veterinarians spend time evaluating and treating those possibilities, the grass awn continues to move throughout the body, spreading disease and infection as it goes.

    To that end, Cathy Lewis of meanseeds.com has started to attempt to organize educational material for veterinarians and dog owners alike, as well as to collect case histories online.

    “The owner is the dog’s best hope. There are so many of us that go to a suburban vet center, and we might be the only working dogs they see and when the dog gets sick they don’t recognize it and get on it quick enough and that’s when you start to see high losses of dogs’ lives,” says Lewis, who has spent more than $30,000 dealing with the problem in her own field-trial competing English springer spaniels and who cites not just a financial burden but also the emotional strain that accompanies the issue. “If we can educate the owner, then they can refer their vet to literature so that the dog has a chance of surviving.”

    Who’s at risk: Heavy hunters, people that train regularly around awn-producing grasses and field trailers (partly due to the amount of time training and partly due to the amount of travel and varied habitats they encounter).

    What to look for: Perhaps the toughest part is actually discerning that grass awns that are responsible. That’s because a dog might not show symptoms of infection for 3- to 6-months after contact with the grasses.

    When evaluating your dog’s condition, Lewis says that your gut instinct might serve as your best indicator. “It’s such a vague pattern that is presented. If you’re training regularly and they’re doing great and then suddenly only one out of four sessions they’re doing well, and you have reason to believe they’ve been exposed, then it’s time to start thinking about it,” she says. “Perhaps the biggest red flag is that the dog is not doing well and you see a temp between 103 and 104, that range seems to be about consistent, then you need to get to the vet and insist this might be something; especially if there are no other obvious reasons. And obviously if an abscess pops up on their side.”

    Forms or locations of the infection: In a paper by Dr. Pat McInteer and Dr. Jim Mills, as well as other vets, three main forms of grass-awn infection are cited:

    Subcutaneous form: Takes place under the skin and most commonly on the side of the dog; this for yields the best treatment results and lest death loss because it’s most easily diagnosed and doesn’t affect critical organs.

    Abdominal form: Extreme and intense pain in the abdomen and back occurs. Most likely due to swallowed awns, the intestinal wall is penetrated and infection tracts result as the seed moves through the body. Flushing of the draining tract and long-term, sometimes expensive, medication have yielded excellent results.

    Thoracic form: The most difficult form to diagnose, the thoracic infection also causes the highest loss of life. It’s difficult to diagnose this form of infection because it’s so vague (only poor performance and lack of stamina over weeks and months are often the only indicator).

    I urge you to check out Lewis’ site, meanseeds.com and educate yourself on the subject, symptoms, most common grasses and treatments, and, perhaps more importantly, educate your veterinarian on the subject. I’m printing off copies of several papers from the site and giving them to my vet. What’s the worst that could happen? They learn something new.


    http://www.dmvs.com.au/grassseeds.html
    Tweed or not to Tweed that is the question

  2. #2
    Member EeeBees's Avatar
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    Barley grass and fescue are probably our worst grasses...barley grass will travel once under the skin, up the nose etc...

    Paspalum is another to watch out for

    Paspalum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    it has a sticky seed head after flowering may cause a form of dermatitis in dogs particularly between the toes and up the legs...very irritating...a saline wash is good (1 tsp of salt to 600mls of water) to relieve the irritation.
    ...amitie, respect mutuel et amour...

    ...le beau et le bon, cela rime avec Breton!...

  3. #3
    Member el borracho's Avatar
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    good info Eee's
    Tweed or not to Tweed that is the question

  4. #4
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    A couple of years ago my ESS had a grass seed lodged in her 'armpit'. We picked up on it almost too late and we nearly lost her. In the afternoon she has been fine but at tea time she was off colour, laying down outside instead of pestering for food, not 'watching the world go by' that sort of thing... by evening she was really going downhill fast and was not able to hold her head up, shivering and so on. An emergency phone call to the vet in Warkworth got it diagnosed over the phone very quickly, she was in shock, had white gums and was basically going down fast. The vet asked a few questions about if she had been shot, poisoned or hit by a car and then said "grass seeds, I'll meet you at the surgery in 30 mins". It took a cocktail of jabs to hit the infection, her shock etc and then a minor operation the next day to remove the seeds - all in about $150.
    We now make sure that her hair is cut short between her toes and that we check for seeds after she has been for a run where there is grass. My experience would suggest that you may not have weeks to think about what may or may not be happening.

  5. #5
    Member el borracho's Avatar
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    what time of year is worse for this -spring , summer ?
    Tweed or not to Tweed that is the question

  6. #6
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    It happened to us in December...

  7. #7
    Member EeeBees's Avatar
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    Once the seeds harden off and the plant dries off that is when barley grass is dangerous...Summer...

    That would have been very scary, Lurcher...thank you for your information...
    ...amitie, respect mutuel et amour...

    ...le beau et le bon, cela rime avec Breton!...

  8. #8
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    yup, the thought of losing the dog was in our minds at the time, I have no doubt that she would not have made it through until morning. The more people who know about the dangers of grass seeds the better - so no problem EeeBees

 

 

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