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Getting medicine down a Basenji

Basenji Health Issues & Questions
  • Hi, I am new to the forum but wish I had found this years ago.

    My Basenji is 16. He has arthritis/hip dysplasia, big lumps and most recently had a very scary seizure. Needless to say – the medications required to treat him are ever expanding. He now has 3 pills and vitamins (liquid form) to take daily. Any suggestions for how to administer these?

    I've tried pill pockets, braunsweger, wrapping it in sandwich meat... these all work for a time but then (in usual basenji fashion) he eventually detects the pills and won't take it anymore. Just thought I would throw it out there to see if anyone had anything new to try.

    Thanks so much!

    Senji's mom

  • Welcome to the forum! I too have tried all the methods you list, and none of them work any more. I even fed them pieces of the meat without pills for a few mouthfuls before the piece with the pill inside, and they know, they just know. They carefully eat what's around the pill and spit it out. I tried a tube big enough to fit the pill in and gently tried blowing the pill down them - they hacked it up. So now, I just open their mouths and put it in their throat with my longest finger, and hold their mouths closed while stroking their throats to make them swallow. Not fun for me or for them, but they did have options and rejected them. So unfortunately, it's the way it is.:rolleyes:

  • Thanks so much Shaye's Mom….

    One other question and it's kind of embarassing but do you have help with putting the pill down their throat? I think I could probably swing that one time and then he would run away if he saw it coming --- just like bath time!

    If I had someone to help me I think I could do it but it's just me and him...so if you do that solo I would like to know how you manage...

  • @Shaye's:

    Welcome to the forum! I too have tried all the methods you list, and none of them work any more. I even fed them pieces of the meat without pills for a few mouthfuls before the piece with the pill inside, and they know, they just know. They carefully eat what's around the pill and spit it out. I tried a tube big enough to fit the pill in and gently tried blowing the pill down them - they hacked it up. So now, I just open their mouths and put it in their throat with my longest finger, and hold their mouths closed while stroking their throats to make them swallow. Not fun for me or for them, but they did have options and rejected them. So unfortunately, it's the way it is.:rolleyes:

    +1…. That is what I do also. I make a "pack" with them that if they let me shove the pill down, I will not hide pills in food. I hold the mouth open and with the other, shove the pill as far down the throat as I can hold the mouth shut till they swallow

  • The only thing that works 100% of the time for hiding pills for pill taking in my house is cream cheese. However, when Brando went into anaphylaxis this summer and couldn't take food to take a pill, I pilled him with benadryl by basically doing what Shaye's mom did, except instead of stroking the neck, I put the pill as far back on his tongue as I could reach, held his mouth closed and blew in his nose which I was taught would elicit a swallow. Thankfully that worked. So I would say it is really important to know how to pill a dog - and not just by hiding it in their food. Because had I not known how to pill Brando, he would have died.

  • And always watch for the 'lick' action after they swallow. That tells you that it made it 'down the hatch'.

  • Is there anyway to get the medication in liquid form? Sometimes the liquid form is more expensive. I have even seen antibiotics in liquid form.

    A few of my dogs are on Metacam for arthritis/spondylosis and it is a liquid that you can either put in food or down the throat.

    Jennifer

  • I grind the pills and add them to a jar of chicken baby food or mix them in with raw diet, mine wont do any solid pills in anything.

  • @lisastewart:

    I grind the pills and add them to a jar of chicken baby food or mix them in with raw diet, mine wont do any solid pills in anything.

    I also grind mine and make a paste with either butter or cream cheese. Since this an everyday thing though, I would suggest the baby food. Too much butter or cream cheese could make him sicker.

  • @lisastewart:

    I grind the pills and add them to a jar of chicken baby food or mix them in with raw diet, mine wont do any solid pills in anything.

    That sounds like a good idea since Senji's Mom has to get more than one pill down her guy. In answer to her question though: Yes, I do it solo - my husband prefers that all things the dogs hate must get done by me. That may be why they are "daddy's girls." that may also be why when they are hurting or unhappy, they come to me, so it's a good tradeoff. Anyway, I open their mouths with one hand and stuff the pill down with the other. I do it when they are calm, and I go to them rather than calling them over. Usually it works best when they are sitting, then I can stroke them a little, then gently open the mouth and put the pill as far back as possible, then hold their mouth shut and stroke the neck. Never heard of blowing in their nose, but if it works, that's worth a try too. Good luck.

  • I also use Peanut Butter. The boxer takes about 7 pills a day and she never, ever, misses her Pb. She hears the jar and comes running-as do all the rest! Even Soda, who didn't like Pb when he came back-I don't think he knew what it was, runs for the Pbutter now.

  • @klshoe:

    Hi, I am new to the forum but wish I had found this years ago.

    My Basenji is 16. He has arthritis/hip dysplasia, big lumps and most recently had a very scary seizure. Needless to say – the medications required to treat him are ever expanding. He now has 3 pills and vitamins (liquid form) to take daily. Any suggestions for how to administer these?

    I've tried pill pockets, braunsweger, wrapping it in sandwich meat... these all work for a time but then (in usual basenji fashion) he eventually detects the pills and won't take it anymore. Just thought I would throw it out there to see if anyone had anything new to try.

    Thanks so much!

    Senji's mom

    I'm lucky enough that my pup thinks meds are treats.. :) But I had one med once that he hated… but usually if I dipped it in peanut butter he loved it. Have you tried putting it in a bowl of wet dog food too? Could work for the liquid meds?

  • I grind up some chicken or turkey breast in a mini food processor and make a few balls containing the pills, as well as a few "decoy" balls of meat. Cream cheese works occasionally too. If he's really being stubborn, I have to make balls of cream cheese wrapped with pieces of turkey lunchmeat.

  • I just read through this thread and it brought back (painful!) memories. Fortunately I do not currently have any dogs or cats to pill. They all seem to figure out the food disguise thing sooner or later, and then it's back to opening the mouth and shoving it down…...and hoping it doesn't come right back after the swallow. I had one girl that I swear could fake it every time, then back would come the pill. Cats are worse! That shallow mouth makes it harder to avoid getting nailed with the canines. My biggest laugh was my Border Collie. He spit out the pill one time, and I expressed my disapproval, at which he said "sorry Mom" and picked it up off the floor and swallowed it! Would never happen with a Basenji! :)

    BTW, be it dog, cat or horse, I have always found it easier to work alone. Too many people ganging up makes the animal suspicious and much more likely to fight. If you have the right relationship with your pet you should be able to finesse it alone just fine. Lots of love and treats (if appropriate) afterwards takes the sting out of it. I am convinced animals read your intention and allow even painful treatments if they trust you.

  • When Oakley came back from the hospital he had to take prilosec and a liver enzyme once a day, the first two days I put it in between two small pieces of cheese and it worked great, didnt even care. However, once he caught on to the pill hiding it stopped working and he would end up wasting ( IMO) A whole piece of cheese and still I'd have a messy wet blue pill in my hands. I found that If I hid it in cheese as I normally did but had a second piece of cheese readily in front of him, it tricked him into swallowing the first piece quickly in order to devour the second. I imagine with any food motivated dog you could trick them this way using anything ( pb,treats,cream cheese)

  • @eeeefarm:

    My biggest laugh was my Border Collie. He spit out the pill one time, and I expressed my disapproval, at which he said "sorry Mom" and picked it up off the floor and swallowed it! Would never happen with a Basenji! :)

    LOL! I had the same experience with my Border Collie. And now am learning the painful lesson of how this just won't happen with my little Basenji :)

  • I forgot to mention that we are very successful with putting pills in a small chunk of well aged cheddar cheese. :D Of course, a nice Chianti with it makes it more memorable. Oh… pilling dogs? :D Yes, for them, the cheese works too.

  • ROFL @ Kipawa!

  • Maybe the trick would be to give wine to the Basenji before the cheese with the pill in it? I don't know about wine, but my last Basenji had an appreciation for beer if he could get his nose in the glass when nobody was looking. :)

  • I vary giving pills with the individual. Some I grind up and mix them well in raw meat. I have several pices of meat only in my hand, give one of those and then tease the dog with the rest (it helps if there's another dog around). I find that then I can easily give the ground pill with the meat. After they've taken the pill I hen I give another piece of meat. With some i have to put the pill at the back of themouth as the others describe. i do it on my own as I can more easily keep the dog calm then.

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    The alpha dog does not squeal when nipped. You should be the alpha dog, not a litter mate. Making a noise like that shows excitement, which to an already unstable minded dog, only compounds the problem. Being the alpha is a mindset. If you watch an alpha dog, they get what they want by intimidation 99% of the time. There is very little aggression but a lot of persuasion. This is why you don’t take things off a dog, you persuade them to drop whatever it is, then remove it. Being the alpha is very much about mindset, posture, willpower, stubbornness, eye contact and voice tone. When the dog nips, straighten up and assume a commanding posture / mindset. I usually say calmly but firmly “hey” in a particular tone. They know immediately that what they just did is not acceptable and that I am serious. I also hold my hand out (not closely too them) with the palm towards them. Also, never underestimate eye contact, the alpha uses it’s eyes a lot. Notice most dogs when you stare at them will stare back and then look away. Always stay calm, never angry and always be fair.
  • Age of your basenji?

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    Yeah you told me about that before and I'm clueless, but I'll try it if I need to, lol. could be the noise of occasional thump, could be they can hear it even tho we can't. My chow would be drooling buckets before we got a mile away. I just had to keep towels down and take off and bag along the trip. But I took her for a 7 hr trip to atlanta and she threw up and threw up, then stopped. Never threw up again. :( on your back. I had been getting radiofrequency ablations in the US, and they really helped. But doctors here will only do them once or twice. I have had at least 6 on one side, 3 on the other. :( But it's miraculous pain relief when it is done right. Maybe your dog acupuncturists knows of a human one they'd recommend?
  • Sick Basenji :(

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    I too am sorry for not seeing this thread sooner and hopefully the poster will return. My Basenji had some teeth removed and the vet prescribed Carprofen as the follow up antibiotic. My Basenji turned out to be allergic to Carprofen which caused her liver to fail. I went through the same scenario you are describing. She gradually quit eating over the course of several days and then her water consumption started to go down. The eating had me worried since she had an excellent appetite upon return from the vet and the final purging of the anesthesia from her system. Nevertheless, her condition started to degrade. I followed her outside and watched her urinate. Her urine was a very bright yellow. I suspected then a liver issue. Once back inside she was shivering - off to the vet we went. LIver panel blood work up showed very high on specific indicators for failing liver. Vet prescribed Denamarin (containing SAM-e and silybin). SAM-e helps protect liver cells from cell death and aids in cell repair and regeneration. The Vet also started fluid injections. Fluid injections were everyday for two weeks. My Basenji showed a remarkable response to the fluid injections becoming much more her normal self even after the first day. She hated the injections and I could hear her cry when receiving them at the vet (believe me that will tear you up). But she was doing better and she (me) were going to have to tuff this out. Also a different antibiotic was prescribed to prevent liver infection during recovery. The Denamarin comes in dosages based on weight (medium for us). It is the size of a large human like solid oblong vitamin pill. Instructions want you to give it on an empty stomach and preferably not to cut it or place in something similar to a pill pocket however you can if necessary. My Basenji would not take that size (can't blame her). Cutting and disguising it did not work either. I was frantic and got the SAM-e in powder form. I couldn't slip her that either. All though some folks had success with peanut butter and liverwurst. I finally after three days had to have the vet pill her along with her fluid treatments. A week later another blood sample and her liver panel indicators were coming down. The pilling would last for a month and it took two people to get the pill down her. The important part is - she fully recovered from the liver failure. She is 13 1/2 yrs old. My experience after having 5 Basenjis is that the breed is sensitive to medications (anesthesia also). Many of the medications work just fine in most other breeds and mixes. The vet, if not that experienced with the Basenji, must be cautioned. Mine was not. Before accepting any medication have the vet go over any contraindications with you and to double check their resources for potential side effects when dealing with Basenjis. They may switch to something else if a medication has a bad track history with Basenjis. Know what to watch for should your Basenji start to react in a non-positive manner. The poster did not indicate if there were medications in play when the dog started showing degenerating conditions. I sincerely hopes this helps in some way and helps other Basenji owners
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  • How do I get my basenji to eat

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    @kipper: Thank you to everyone for the great advice! Kipper is our second Basenji and the thought of loosing him at such a young age is horrific to us. Kip is currently taking metronidazole twice a day. I know the med does make him tired, but it's supposed to help get rid of his virus that in turn will bring back his appetite. I have tried all his favorites like cheese, sour cream and even homemade waffles. His diet is meat twice a day and free feeding of high quality kibble. The vet is very knowledgeable about Falconi and says all his levels are were they should be and the bicarb is all he needs. We will take Kip in again in 3 months for another blood test. Thanks again! Anna I don't want to doubt your Vet, But honestly, I find that hard to believe that he only needs Bicarb and not any of the Vitamins that are recommended in the protocol. If it were my dog, I would contact Dr. Gonto who developed the Protocol and run it by him and he is happy to talk to owners with Fanconi (it is Fanconi, not Falconi) about treatment along with conversations with your Vet. Also Thyroid testing is important for a dog with Fanconi. This would be the fill panel not just the one T4 level that are shown on regular blood work. Dr Gonto's contact info can be found at the bottom of the Fanconi Protocol information http://www.basenji.org/ClubDocs/fanconiprotocol2003.pdf Also you might want to consider joining the Fanconi Yahoo group for people with Fanconi affected dogs. They would also be able to give you good ideas since they are all dealing with dogs with Fanconi. It is a closed group for only people with affected dogs. If he was eating before the metronidazole then hopefully when he is done with that he will begin eating again.
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    My C3 has the same itchy skin problems too mostly due to the 1001 allergies he has…but I use the Aveeno Oatmeal Ointment to help calm the itch & I also put Brewers Yeast tablets & Fish Oil tablets into his food to help keep his skin & coat healthy. Sometimes we need to bathe regularly (like once a week :eek:) in the Aveeno oatmeal shampoo to help as well. Good luck!