Common Household Toxins
Know What Poisons Lurk in Your Home and YardWhile prevention is always the best medicine to keep your pet safe from common toxins, knowing the symptoms of possible poisoning may save your pet’s life.
Numerous toxic items can be found both inside and outside the home, and may of them are surprisingly common.
- Toxic foods include chocolate, avocado, onions and garlic, raisins and grapes, alcoholic drinks, caffeinated beverages, macadamia nuts, and chewing gum with xylitol.
- Many plants (even dead or dried) are toxic to pets. In some cases, only certain parts of the plant are dangerous (leaves, fruit, seeds). Be aware of the toxic plants that grow in your home and surroundings (both cultivated and wild), and keep your pets away from them or remove them entirely.
- Other toxins found outside include mushrooms and garden mulch.
- Keep your pets off lawns or gardens freshly treated with fertilizers, herbicides or insecticides. If your dog has come in contact with treated lawns or has walked on snow or ice treated with ice-melt, wipe his feet clean as soon as you get home to avoid the possibility of him licking his paws and ingesting the poison. Store all chemicals in cabinets and other places your pet can’t reach.
- Real danger to pets continues from antifreeze/coolant, even though animal-friendly products are now available (usually made with propylene glycol, not ethylene glycol). Always wipe up antifreeze leaks or spills of any size. Attracted to the sweet taste, pets can die from kidney failure if they ingest even a small amount of this very toxic material.
- Store poisonous baits to rid your home of pests (rodents, snails, insects, etc.) in places your pooch cannot accessLike antifreeze, some baits smell sweet but are very toxic to pets, causing severe internal bleeding.
- Other household items poisonous to pets include household cleaners (the fumes can be noxious) and heavy metals, such as lead found in paint chips and linoleum.
- Consult with your veterinarian before giving your dog any vitamin, herbal supplement or medication made for humans. Even small doses of medications of any kind—whether for humans or pets—can be lethal to pets. Keep all medicines well out of your dog’s reach.
- Vomiting/upset stomach
- Labored or shallow breathing
- Drooling
- Increased or decreased heart rate
- Fever
- Hyperactivity or sluggishness/lethargy
- Increased thirst or lack of thirst or hunger
- Dilated pupils
- Stumbling or staggering
- Seizures or tremors
- Loss of consciousness
Contact us at 954-752-1879 immediately if you think your pet has ingested a dangerous substance.
Reach the APCC Animal Poison Control Hotline 24 hours a day at 888-426-4435.
http://www.aspcapro.org/animal-poison-control.php





