Close Call

This past Sunday, Lucy, my springer spaniel, began to bleed from her mouth.

This past Sunday, Lucy, my springer spaniel, began to bleed from her mouth. I thought she had a cut on her tongue from chewing on a bone and waited until the following morning to take her to the vet. By the time I got there, she was urinating frequently and incontinent. The team at Animal Health Care Associates prescribed antibiotics for a urinary tract infection and sent me home. As Lucy’s bleeding worsened that evening, I scrolled online, trying to figure out what might be wrong. She was drinking copiously, refusing all food, bleeding from her gums and increasingly lethargic. Finally I pieced it together. The small green pellets I had shooed her away from during a walk off Middle Road must have been rat poison. Having never seen rat poison before, I didn’t recognize them at the time, nor would I have expected them to be lying near a field next to a fence that bordered a residential road.

By Tuesday morning, Lucy had lost so much blood that she was going into shock. Although I had mentioned her eating the green pellets to the team at Animal Health, they had not flagged that as a cause for her distress until I told them about all I had read the night before and that all her symptoms fit the bill for rat poison toxicity.

I rushed off-Island to Cape Cod Veterinary Specialists, just over the Bourne Bridge, where I entrusted her and several thousand dollars to the capable hands of this 24/7 critical care facility. Yesterday she had plasma and blood transfusions, IV fluids and vitamin K injections. This morning her vital signs are stable.

I am writing this letter to spotlight the terrible dangers of using and leaving rat poison around carelessly and also to inform pet owners of what to look for by way of symptoms of rodenticide toxicity. In Lucy’s case, it was a full five days after ingesting the rat poison before symptoms showed up. Rat poison is an anticoagulant that causes target animals to just bleed to death.

I think Lucy is going to make it, thanks to the emergency care she received on the Cape. I thank Animal Health Care Associates for sending me there, although I wish they had diagnosed her condition a day earlier. The Steamship Authority was very helpful in sliding us right on to the first available ferry to make it to the mainland expeditiously.

Dominique Callimanopulos
Chilmark

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2015 - 19:55

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Lisa Owens Viani Berkeley, CA

Please do not use rat poison--it is decimating our natural predators (hawks, owls, bobcats, mountain lions, etc.) Old fashioned snap traps inside boxes or "The Raticator" are much safer for pets and wildlife. See www.raptorsarethesolution.org

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/28/2015 - 21:54

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Kathryn Louyse Glendale

We too are experiencing issues with rodenticides in Griffith Park and surrounding communities. In July, 2014 several of us went to an Arts, Parks and Aging Committee hearing at LA's City Hall to argue for tougher restrictions and alternatives to usage of rodenticides in the area. While parks maintenance was supposed to study (and perhaps) present alternatives, we're now into the end of August, headed toward the end of the year with little sign that this issue will be placed on the agenda. Meanwhile our resident mountain lion (P22) has been poisoned (and treated once) and bobcats, coyote and other park animals have been poisoned and are dying... disgraceful that the department tasked with Park safety is ignoring these signs because ultimately what we do in Parks eventually comes into the residential areas.

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