![]() | ||
| Home | Basic Dog Health | Advanced Dog Health | Aging Dog Care | Resources | Partners | ||
Articles - Advanced Dog Health
Dog Health: Your Dog's Mineral Needs
What do minerals do?
Minerals, in addition to vitamins, only make up less than two percent of any formulated diet for dogs. However, they are the most critical of nutrients. Although m...
Dog Health - Gastric Dilatation & Gastric Torsion Complex
Gastric dilatation and Gastric torsion complex is a condition that may occur in any breed, at any age. Commonly known as bloat, this syndrome is most often encountered among large and deep-chested breeds. The complex results from the dog's inability to pass food (or other ingesta) through the stomach into the lower intestines,...
Dog Health: Front Leg Lameness
Dogs carry over 60 percent of their weight on their front legs, with their hind legs acting as accelerators. Their front legs are attached to the rest of his body by muscles with no collarbone, which provides for more flexibility. All this powerful equipment is susceptible to injury or damage by misuse, particularly in breeds whose bone structure has been ch...
Dog Health: The Potential Dangers Of Your Dog's Vaccinations
Many dogs have allergic reactions that are the direct result of vaccinations. Because of the severity of some of these reactions, vaccines have become a very controversial subject. There are an increasing number of dangers and the veterinary community is becoming more aware of these issues when it comes to routinely giving annual vacc...
Dog Health: What Laboratory Results Reveal
As a responsible dog owner you should take your dog to the veterinarian at least once per year. This is a good habit to form with your dog that will keep him healthy for years to come, as well as enable you to prevent diseases, instead of waiting for them to form. A yearly physical examination will consist of evaluating your dog's ...
Dog Health - Five Ways To Prevent Congenital Problems In Dogs
Prevention is the main key in order to avoid diseases and illness from attacking your dog. In fact, the best prevention begins even before you start breeding the dog. But what do you do if your pet was born with a...
Dog Health - Anal Sac Problems In Dogs
Something that you may not have understood about your dog before are his anal sacs. These two sacs are located in the muscle tissue on either side of the anus at the five and seven o'clock positions. An intensely malodorous secretion, usually brownish and watery in appearance, resides within the sacs.
The anal sac fluid, which emerges thr...
|
Translate This Page
Dog and Master Related eBooksTreat Your Pet At Home With Over 1000 At-home Pet Health Remedies: Keep Your Dog Or Cat Healthy, Extend Their Life And Save Money At The Vet!
| |
Dog and Master Related ArticlesDog Health - How To Exercise Your Dog If You Live In The City As someone who lives in the city, there are many ways to exercise a dog in your area. Why limit your dog's exercise just with a walk in your neighborhood? There's an attitude among some city dwellers that having a dog in the city isn't fair to the dog. Somehow, there is this myth that dogs are happiest in rural areas where they have plenty of room to roam, or in subur... Continue Reading... Aging Dog Care: Changes In Your Aging Dog Aging dogs are less adaptable to, and more adversely affected by, stress and change. Yet so many dog owners do not take this into consideration when making plans involving their older dog. For example, for years you and your dog enjoyed those races through the woods or around the playground. You may still enjoy it now, but your older dog p... Continue Reading...
| ||
|
|
||
|
| ||
| Sitemap | © 2006, All Rights Reserved Worldwide | Legal Information | Partners | ||