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i have three wolfhounds one four year old is frightend of any loud noises some one has just let afirework off and he wee d in the hall he has been on valerian for six months can any one suggest adrug they would use but not asp i have tried a plug in calmer to no avail
By digger
Date 21.10.05 08:00 UTC
Many people find a long course of desensitisation using a recording of the sounds that the dog find scarey helps - but this would take many months.
Drugs should only be suggested by a vet (infact it's illegal for anyone else to prescribe drugs for an animal, although there is no harm in mentioning things which you've had success with personally)
By jas
Date 21.10.05 10:46 UTC
I agree with digger about playing a tape of sounds that frigten him, softly at first and then gradually increasing the volume. When he is upset by loud noises by all means give him a cuddle but don't make a big thing of it or he will think you are scared too. Talk to him in a cheerful upbeat way so that he knows you aren't a bit worried.
You could talk to your vet about getting some ACP to help him over bonfire night but its not something he can be on regularly.
By JaneG
Date 22.10.05 05:12 UTC
Hi Sandra, someone else on CD gave me this link http://members.farmline.com/stress/sounds.htm I started playing it over and over again with the volume just turned on, then gradually increasing it and it has certainly helped my gang.
thank you all for replying i will try the tape the vet did say acp but a top wolf hound breeder sai d the amount would kill him so i wont use that last year another vet gave him two days supply of phenabarbatone which does not help as the fireworks have started now i have tried t0 act normal music on lights on curtains closed but every bang he jumps on my knee as he weighs fourteen stone its no joke the only place he felt safe was in the bath room window blacked out socks in ears and scarf round his head music full blast because i am in there the rest join us so it gets a bit congested i have to sit in the bath a night i am loth to repeat that is why iam desperate for a solution they are letting fireworks off as type this hes puffing well but we are all locked in the bedroom listening to a queen tape full blast hes happy with this but i need socks in my ears
Are you keeping the DAP plugged in and switched on 24/7? as this is necessary, sorry if you are, not all seem aware that this is a "must" :)
Is he still able to respond to you and to eat? You could try giving him a tasty bit of cheese or liver each time fireworks go off - I did this with an elderly dog of mine before the DAP, and it worked really well, but of course won't help if the dog is too terrfied to eat. You have to sit with the dog and feed it each time there's a bang, but it may prevent things getting worse and may even improve things a bit :)
Lindsay
x
no he is to frightened to eat i do keep dap on allthe time i have sent for a tape of firework noises so i will let you know if this works i have upped his valerian the other two wolfhounds as long as i am there sleep through it but my yorkie gets very upset but he is small enough to hide under the bed in his den

Have you tried Bach Rescue Remedy, use it on lots of different occasions for all our lot, Nov 5th they have it in the water dish and also neat - about 3 doses in an hour before and during they main village firework display which is about 3 or 400 yds away.
No I can't take them out as two cannot travel in the same car together but I used to drive to the middle of nowhere with previous combination of dogs.
Chris
ps be carefull of valerian as you can get problems with too much - been there done that.
hi chris could tell me the problem you had with valerian please and how many you gave
By jas
Date 26.10.05 16:14 UTC
How much ACP did your vet suggest using? I've given ACP to wolfhounds in the past with no ill effects but I haven't had to use anything like the recommended dose by weight. My vet recommends giving a relatively low dose to start with and then giving more after 45 minutes if the required level of sedation is not achieved. The only serious side effect I know of for ACP is to make an already epileptic dog more likely to fit and presumably your boy isn't epileptic. As you only want to take the edge off his fear, not to knock him out a fairly low dose might do the trick so it might be worth talking to your vet about it again, mentioning what the breeder said.
I do love the picture of your family and wolfie in the bathroom :) but do realise that its no joke. I've had lap sitting wolfies (affection not fear) and they are HEAVY :D
the vet suggested three 25 mg acp tablets as i have lost three of my precious wolfhounds at four with bone cancer perhaps iam over protective with the three wolfies i have left especialy with strachen who had a major operation on his knee two years ago which left him with a limp and i dont like to see him jump around when these fire works go off in case he damages it he has a magnetic collor and he has glucosamine chondroitin msm as the vet wanted to put him to sleep two years ago as he thought he would never walk again but strac can run as well as the others when he wants to i must say my heart is in my throat when this happens but i have had two years now that i didnt think iwould have so he is speacial he has been through so much
By jas
Date 26.10.05 21:05 UTC
I've not given that much to an IW. I was looking noise problems up and came across this:
BSAVA Small Animal Formulary 4th Edition
Created on 30 Nov 2004
ERRATA
Page 8: ACP and use in sound phobias 'The use of ACP in the management of sound phobias in dogs, such as firework or thunder phobia, is contraindicated'. This is not strictly true.
The use of ACP is discouraged by behaviourists but not contraindicated. Treatment for sound phobias should comprise behavioural therapy with or without medicinal therapy.
The preferred drugs for long-term control of sound phobias are the monoamine oxidase inhibitors (e.g. selegiline) or selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (e.g. sertraline). For short-term control a benzodiazepine or propranolol are recommended.
I have no experience with any of the preferred drugs mentioned as I've never had a dog that was bothered by noise, but they sound as if they'd be worth asking your vet about.
Glad that Strachen recovered so well from his knee op. The worst thing about IWs is that so many die young but on a positive note the last one we lost was 13 years old. :)
i have been consulting the drug book benzodiazepines have astrong seditive affect helping to relieve anxiety propranol is a beta blocker and overdose danger is high all quite frightening some people wish they could win the lottery ijust wish one of my daughters or grandaughters had married a vet also i cannot find the word contraindicated in the dictionary poor strachen such a pity he is not like the other two they are so laid back and for them sleeping any thing less than twenty two hours a day is called sleep deprevation i am sure they have found some herb in the garden that has certain propertys ifeel as though i could do with some of what ever they are on i think i shall have to vist the vet and ask him some questions the thing is i am sixty one and always feel about ten and he would like to smack my legs if i question him to much
By jas
Date 27.10.05 16:42 UTC
Hi Sandra, benzodiazepines are used in human medicine (Valium is the best known one) and the risk of serious problems, even in overdose, is low with the group of drugs. As you say propranolol is a beta-blocker used in human medicine to control blood pressure (Inderal). It is also used for people who have panic attacks. It can have serious side-effects but in practice these rarely happen in humans. The one thing that would put me off using propranolol in an IW is that it can casue heart failure so I'd be wary of it unless you are absolutely sure that the IW doesn't have sub-clinical cardiomyopathy.
Know all about the "more than two hours awake per day is sleep deprivation" syndrome. :D
Don't let your vet intimidate you :) - you're paying to be alloed to ask him questions!
By sonny
Date 28.10.05 16:27 UTC
HI, We have a few dogs in our class that are scared of fireworks and our trainer recently went on a course for Tellington Touch. Now i dont know that much about it myself but from what i have seen it helps to calm dogs down and relax's them. I have been shown a couple of techniqes and practiced on my SIL's dog ( im lucky my 2 are brill with fireworks) as she is so frightened she wont go to the toilet after 3pm in the afternoon infact she wont go outside at all and is very scared, they are already getting lots of kids setting them off early evening :( Anyway i did what i had been shown and within 5 minutes she was her usual self playing and generally calm and later on she even went outside. SIL repeated what i had shown her to do when needed. Doesn't hurt the dog in anyway btw. I was impressed that it worked so quickly and with minimal effort. Heres a link to a site that i found on google, hopefully someone has heard about this and knows how it all works.
http://www.naturalpetcare.co.uk/ttouch.htm
Just to let you all know how Strachen got through last night and the noise was worse than last year At one point I was tempted to give him a sedative as he was so distressed then he dicided that he would hide in the bottom half of the bunk bed it took some getting on has he cannot bend his bad leg But he spent most of the night on it behind a curtain i hung up still panting but sitting still not pacing up and down Ithought Micah would play up as this is his bed but he was rearly good he and Oliver slept through it all and it was along night 4 30 till gone 11 he and Iwhere totaly exausted he only got up for his breakfast and he has been asleep ever since my firework tape got lost in the post and arrived to late but I shall try it every day till new years eve and see how it goe s THANK YOU ALLfor your advice and concern
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