Pot and pooches donāt mix.
Dina Howell found that out the hard way last weekend ā and so have many other Metro Vancouver residents in recent years - including a involving a New Westminster dog owner.
Howell had Rosie, her eight-month-old black Labrador, on a leash while she was watching her daughterās soccer game at the field at Dr. Charles Best secondary school when she noticed Rosie licking something off the ground, but didnāt think much of it.
āThe only problem with labs is they eat everything that smells good,ā said the Coquitlam resident. āDogs are quick to pick up anything.ā
When they returned home, Rosie started looking āsuper sleepy,ā said Howell, who assumed her puppy was tired because they had taken a two-hour walk that morning.
Rosie was oblivious to anything and anybody for about an hour and, when the pooch woke up, Howell noticed Rosie had urinated on herself, something the puppy hadnāt done in months. When Rosie tried to stand up, she fell over.
āShe was hiding from us, she wouldnāt come near us for a while,ā said Howell. āIt was scary to see a puppy like that.ā
Howell was particularly concerned because sheād had a previous 14-year-old lab put down because of a stroke when the animal exhibited similar symptoms.
ā[Rosie] looked exactly like that.ā
After consulting her regular vet clinic and a veterinarian friend by phone, she took Rosie to the Central Emergency Clinic on Roderick Avenue in Coquitlam.
To her surprise, the vet said to Howell, āāI suspect itās marijuana poisoning. Iām pretty sure it is. We have lots of dogs with this.āā
Testing confirmed the diagnosis and Rosie was given intravenous fluids and kept overnight, at a cost of more than $800. By the time Howell picked up Rosie Monday morning, the puppy was fine.
The receptionist told Howell pets often ingest marijuana in parks, on school grounds and hiking trails. Itās not just from pooches finding their ownerās stashes, she said. (Howell recalled finding a golf ball-sized bag of pot while walking Rosie at Ranch Park elementary earlier this year.)
Central veterinarian Peter Bassi said the clinic gets two or three such cases a week, sometimes more. In fact, on the night of Rosieās stay, there was another case in the clinic.
āItās not always the ingestion of the marijuana, itās the smoking in the environment. Second-hand smoke can make them fairly high,ā said Bassi.
He cited an incident where the owners smoked pot in their basement suite while the dog was outside on the porch inhaling the rising fumes.
āThe dog was fairly high and they were surprised it was the same marijuana fumes that they had inhaled,ā said Bassi.
He noted the keen sense of smell dogs have can often get them in trouble, especially when out for walks in areas where kids are known to sneak a toke.
āThey get attracted to this very easily because itās a different smell to them, and they get their nose down and all of a sudden they get high on their own,ā said Bassi. āIt could be fatal if the ingestion is more than what they can handle because they donāt know how much to eat or not to eat.ā
Before cannabis was legalized last month, he said, pet owners were āvery protectiveā when presented with the diagnosis of marijuana poisoning, saying they didnāt know how their pet ingested it. But Bassi also said it is quite common for pets to get poisoned while out for a walk.
āWe always tell people if you live in an area for a few months, you get a feel for where the kids hang out and go to smoke, and try not to take your dog in that area because there are tons of other places that are considered clean and people donāt smoke in that area,ā said Bassi.
He also advised walking dogs in the daytime so owners can see if their pet ingests something.
According to the website petpoisonhelpline.com, āclinical signs [of marijuana poisoning] can be seen within minutes to hours depending on how the pet was exposed (inhalation versus ingestion). Classic signs of poisoning include a dazed expression, glassy eyes, incoordination, slow response times, and dribbling urine. Vomiting and drooling are also common, despite marijuanaās anti-nausea effects. Other signs include changes in heart rate, vocalization, neurological stimulation, hyperactivity, or coma.ā
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