Frisco Emergency Pet Care Podcast

Your Top Pet Questions Answered: Dog and Cat Parent FAQs

12 min · Gestern
Episode Your Top Pet Questions Answered: Dog and Cat Parent FAQs Cover

Beschreibung

Your dog swallows a sock, digs through the bathroom trash, or snaps up something off the sidewalk and suddenly you’re doing the mental math: “Do we wait, or do we go now?” We tackle those exact moments with Dr. Mike LoSasso, Chief of Staff at Frisco Emergency Pet Care [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com], and get honest, practical guidance designed to help you prevent an emergency vet visit when possible and act fast when it matters. We talk about what ER teams actually see most often, including the problems that show up year-round like foreign body ingestion, medication exposure, and GI emergencies. Dr. LoSasso shares simple pet-proofing habits that reduce risk in real homes with real life mess, plus the key detail every pet parent should track after an ingestion: what it was and how long ago it happened. That timing can determine whether induced vomiting is an option and whether you might avoid surgery. We also dig into prevention beyond the living room floor. We discuss core vaccines that keep pets out of the ER, with a focus on parvovirus protection [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] for puppies and leptospirosis risk in North Texas, even for “mostly indoor” dogs exposed through wildlife urine in yards. Then we address common misconceptions about raw diets and pet food marketing, including food safety risks like salmonella and E. coli from repeated handling, and why paying more doesn’t automatically mean better nutrition. We wrap with a clear reminder that dental disease is not just bad breath, it can impact whole-body health over time. If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with a fellow pet parent, and leave a quick review so more people can keep their dogs and cats safe. To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit: https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] Frisco Emergency Pet Care  11201 Preston Road  Frisco, Texas 75033  469-287-6767

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Alle Folgen

19 Folgen

Episode Your Top Pet Questions Answered: Dog and Cat Parent FAQs Cover

Your Top Pet Questions Answered: Dog and Cat Parent FAQs

Your dog swallows a sock, digs through the bathroom trash, or snaps up something off the sidewalk and suddenly you’re doing the mental math: “Do we wait, or do we go now?” We tackle those exact moments with Dr. Mike LoSasso, Chief of Staff at Frisco Emergency Pet Care [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com], and get honest, practical guidance designed to help you prevent an emergency vet visit when possible and act fast when it matters. We talk about what ER teams actually see most often, including the problems that show up year-round like foreign body ingestion, medication exposure, and GI emergencies. Dr. LoSasso shares simple pet-proofing habits that reduce risk in real homes with real life mess, plus the key detail every pet parent should track after an ingestion: what it was and how long ago it happened. That timing can determine whether induced vomiting is an option and whether you might avoid surgery. We also dig into prevention beyond the living room floor. We discuss core vaccines that keep pets out of the ER, with a focus on parvovirus protection [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] for puppies and leptospirosis risk in North Texas, even for “mostly indoor” dogs exposed through wildlife urine in yards. Then we address common misconceptions about raw diets and pet food marketing, including food safety risks like salmonella and E. coli from repeated handling, and why paying more doesn’t automatically mean better nutrition. We wrap with a clear reminder that dental disease is not just bad breath, it can impact whole-body health over time. If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with a fellow pet parent, and leave a quick review so more people can keep their dogs and cats safe. To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit: https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] Frisco Emergency Pet Care  11201 Preston Road  Frisco, Texas 75033  469-287-6767

Gestern12 min
Episode Heat and Other Hazards: Protecting Pets During the Summer Months Cover

Heat and Other Hazards: Protecting Pets During the Summer Months

Sidewalks that quietly burn paw pads. A backyard hose that can turn into scalding water. A sunny afternoon that becomes heat stroke in minutes. Summer can be brutal on pets, and we want you to feel prepared before the next walk, bath, storm, or holiday celebration. We talk through the warm weather emergencies we see most at Frisco Emergency Pet Care [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] and the “hidden hazards” many pet parents never think about. Dr. Mike LoSasso [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] explains why hot pavement injuries can show up after the walk is over, and why you should always run a hose until the water cools before bathing your dog. We also connect the dots on seasonal risks beyond heat, including thunderstorms and Fourth of July fireworks that can trigger panic and escapes, plus increased exposure to snake bites like copperhead bites and more bee and wasp stings that can cause facial swelling, hives, and other allergic reactions. We wrap with practical guidance on heat stroke warning signs and why short-faced breeds can struggle to cool down, while still reminding you that any dog can overheat without shade, water, and a way to cool off. We also answer a common hydration question, including when it may make sense to limit gulping for pets with upset stomachs. If you found this helpful, subscribe for more emergency vet tips [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com], share this with a fellow pet parent, and leave a quick review so more families can find it. To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit: https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] Frisco Emergency Pet Care  11201 Preston Road  Frisco, Texas 75033  469-287-6767

9. Juni 202612 min
Episode From “Tom Cat” Blockages to Incontinence: Why Urinary Problems Turn Critical Fast Cover

From “Tom Cat” Blockages to Incontinence: Why Urinary Problems Turn Critical Fast

A cat that strains in the litter box and leaves nothing behind is not “being weird” that can be a clock-starting emergency. Julie Schwenzer and Dr. Mike LoSasso from Frisco Emergency Pet Care [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] walk through urinary problems in dogs and cats with a clear focus on what becomes urgent, what can wait for a regular appointment, and what you should never ignore. We talk about why female dogs and cats tend to get more urinary tract infections, what pet parents typically notice at home (frequent trips, accidents, blood in urine), and why quick testing matters. Then we shift to the scary cases: urinary obstruction [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com]. Dr. LoSasso explains how stones can lodge in the male dog urethra and why that can rapidly turn life-threatening as toxins and potassium build up when urine cannot leave the body. Male cats get their own spotlight because their urethra narrows dramatically near the end, making them prone to “blocked tom” episodes from tiny stones or mucus plugs. We cover what emergency treatment usually involves (catheterization, IV fluids, electrolyte checks, multi-day hospitalization), why the bill can be a shock, and why recurrence is hard to predict. We also dig into prevention you can actually act on, including hydration, wet food vs dry food, and when a urinary diet [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] is worth it. If you care for a cat or dog, listen now, share this with a fellow pet parent, and subscribe so you do not miss the next practical ER guide. After you listen, leave a review and tell us: what urinary warning sign surprised you most? To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit: https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] Frisco Emergency Pet Care  11201 Preston Road  Frisco, Texas 75033  469-287-6767

25. Mai 202611 min
Episode Recognizing Heart Trouble Early: Understanding Congestive Heart Failure in Dogs and Cats Cover

Recognizing Heart Trouble Early: Understanding Congestive Heart Failure in Dogs and Cats

A pet can live with a heart murmur for years and still look totally fine, right up until breathing becomes an emergency. We walk through what congestive heart failure [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] really is in dogs and cats, why it often shows up as fluid in the lungs, and how that changes oxygen exchange so quickly. If you’ve ever wondered whether a cough is “just a cough” or something more serious, this conversation gives you clear, practical signals to watch for. We break down the mechanics in plain language: the heart is a pump with one-way valves, and when a valve leaks, blood can move the wrong direction and raise pressure in the lungs. That pressure can cause pulmonary edema [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com], leading to coughing in many small dogs and making cough suppressants the wrong tool when the root problem is fluid. We also explain why you can’t rely on what you hear alone a murmur doesn’t tell you whether congestion is present which is why chest x-rays and especially ultrasound can be so valuable in emergency veterinary medicine. Then we get specific about treatment and next steps. In the ER, we use oxygen therapy to reduce the work of breathing and furosemide (Lasix) to pull fluid out so the lungs can dry out. We talk about common long-term medications, including pimobendan, and why earlier treatment in some dogs may delay the onset of congestive heart failure. For cats, we cover how hypertrophic cardiomyopathy can stay hidden, why cats often don’t cough, what open-mouth breathing can mean, and why clot prevention meds like clopidogrel (Plavix) may be part of the plan. If this helps you think differently about your pet’s breathing, share it with another pet parent, subscribe for more emergency vet guidance, and leave a review so more families can find us when every second counts. What early sign do you want us to cover next? To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit: https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] Frisco Emergency Pet Care  11201 Preston Road  Frisco, Texas 75033  469-287-6767

18. Mai 202612 min
Episode The Senior Pet Mistakes That Lead to Emergencies Cover

The Senior Pet Mistakes That Lead to Emergencies

Your dog didn’t wake up “old” overnight and your cat isn’t “just slowing down.” Aging is a life stage, not a diagnosis, but it can quietly stack the odds toward arthritis pain, kidney disease, cancer, and heart trouble. We talk through what counts as a senior pet in real life, why a Great Dane ages differently than a small dog, and why some breeds need earlier vigilance because of known risks like valvular heart disease. From the emergency vet [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] perspective, patterns show up fast: puppies often arrive with parvo, pneumonia, or low blood sugar, middle-aged dogs with injuries and certain hormone diseases, and seniors with complicated illnesses where one problem uncovers another. We dig into the subtle signs owners often miss, like gradual weight loss, reduced tolerance for walks, changes in sleep or appetite, coughing with exercise, and breathing shifts that can point to congestive heart failure. You’ll also hear practical home safety tips for older pets, including why slick floors and pool areas can be more dangerous for seniors with weaker muscles or declining vision. We also make the case for a simple, high-impact habit: a thorough veterinary exam [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] every six months for senior dog care and senior cat health. It is less about doing “more stuff” and more about tracking trends, catching murmurs early, spotting dental pain, and noticing mobility changes before they become emergencies. If your pet seems stoic, we explain how veterinarians ask the right questions and why a short, vet-guided anti-inflammatory trial can sometimes reveal hidden arthritis pain. Subscribe for more emergency veterinary medicine guidance, share this with a fellow pet parent, and leave a review if it helped. What’s one small change you’ve noticed in your senior pet lately? To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit: https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com [https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com] Frisco Emergency Pet Care  11201 Preston Road  Frisco, Texas 75033  469-287-6767

13. Mai 202613 min