Frisco Emergency Pet Care Podcast
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
19 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Frisco Emergency Pet Care Podcast!