While playing fetch with your pooch during a hot summer day, the unthinkable happens—your beloved companion collapses. Seemingly fine one moment, your furry pal appears to overheat in the blink of an eye. Try to stay calm during this terrifying situation, and follow these steps to quickly and safely lower your furry pal’s body temperature.
Step 1: Bring your pet indoors into an air-conditioned building — Take your pet to the coolest place that you can find nearby, to provide a cool, ambient temperature.
Step 2: Run a cool—not cold—bath — If your pet is in and out of consciousness, ensure their head remains above water. A cool bath will be more beneficial at reducing your pet’s body temperature than an ice bath, since extreme cold causes vasoconstriction, where the blood vessels in the extremities constrict, and the overheated blood is shunted back to your pet’s core, actually raising their body temperature. By running cool water over your pet, you also help heat evaporate, rather than trapping it around their body, as you would using wet towels.
Step 3: Point a high-powered fan at your pet — Proper ventilation will further dissipate heat, and help cool your furry pal.
Step 4: Check your pet’s temperature every five minutes — Once your pet’s body temperature reaches 103 degrees, stop the cooling process. If you continue until their temperature reaches a normal level—100 to 102 degrees—you could inadvertently cause hypothermia by cooling your pet too much.
Step 5: Rush your pet to our veterinary hospital — After a heat exhaustion or heatstroke episode, your pet needs veterinary care. While not always immediately obvious, but detectable on blood work, organ damage can occur if your pet remains too hot for too long. Once at our hospital, we can evaluate your best friend’s condition, and form a treatment plan, which may include monitoring and intravenous fluid therapy, or blood transfusions if the situation is critical. Regardless of how well you cooled your pet at home, a veterinary visit is crucial, to detect hidden organ damage or other issues.
If your pet suffers from a heat exhaustion episode, they are more at risk for future heat-related issues. Be sure to keep a close eye on your furry friend during hot weather, and please contact us if you have any questions.