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Penny | 2 years ago
Hi Krista! I Have A 9 Year Old Beagle Who Periodically (at Least Twice A Month) Will …

Hi Krista! I have a 9 year old beagle who periodically (at least twice a month) will vomit all day. He vomits his morning food, then continues to vomit mucus and bile the remainder of the day. His vet has done a physical exam and blood work, and he kept him overnight once to give him IV fluids and anti nausea meds. He always bounces back within 12 hours, but this is getting to be really tiresome. His weight and energy levels are fine after this passes. And his stools look normal. Do you have any suggestions? I will share a picture of the last vomit from a couple of hours ago – this was about the 8th time he puked today. It went from food to mucus to this. I don’t feed him at all when he’s like this. As of right now, he’s perfectly fine and begging for food!

One additional note… we give him Purina One (vet’s suggestion) and use a slow feeder. We feed him small meals 4x/day, rather than 2 big meals. We are also very careful about making sure he doesn’t eat anything he shouldn’t.

Thank you!!

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  1. Laura

    Couple of thoughts.
    1 – how often do you clean the slow feeder?
    2 – how often do you clean and refill his water?

    My current dog is still very new to us, but I’ve learned if I don’t keep her water PRISTINE – meaning I wash the bowl twice daily – she’ll have a pukey day. My Doberman would get pukey if I didn’t wash her bowl daily.

    1. Penny Post author

      I will start doing this – good idea, thank you!

  2. Krista Magnifico

    Hello,
    I would say a few things should be considered.
    1. Full blood work for me is a superchem with electrolytes a cbc thyroid urine and fecal. These all need to be done.
    2. Is he on a good preventative for fleas ticks heartworm and intestinal parasites. I like Credelio and interceptor plus. Cover for these vs wait for them to shown up
    3. A sensitive stomach formula like I/d from science diet. Ie a prescription gi food
    4. Look for addisons disease and Maldigestion. Whoever does your vets lab services should have an internal medicine consult available to discuss those.
    5. Surgery abdominal radiographs plain and with barium, or ultrasound. There should be local vets who can do this without the referral needed at this point.
    6. Rule out something simple and easy to fix like bilious vomiting syndrome.

    Ok. That’s my initial thoughts on this.

    Hope they help.

    Keep me posted

    Krista.

    1. Penny Post author

      Thank you! I will talk to my vet about all of these suggestions. He did mention an internal medicine doc, so I will ask for that referral. (PS… my apologies for misspelling your name, I corrected my post!)

Penny

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