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young walker
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Apr 2005
Location:
Posts: 111

Bllod in Stool

I have observed blood in my dog's stool. The other night while hunting, I observed him trying to go about three different times. The last time he tried to go, nothing but deep red blood came out. Any suggestions on what I should do or what the cause is? I feed the dog Pride Dog Food in the orange bag 26/20.

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Old Post 01-24-2013 01:50 PM
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groworg1
UKC Forum Member

Registered: May 2008
Location: Gillett, Pa
Posts: 1861

hook worms ? would be my first thought !

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Old Post 01-24-2013 01:58 PM
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Maniac
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Registered: Feb 2008
Location:
Posts: 3550

quote:
Originally posted by groworg1
hook worms ? would be my first thought !
x 2

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Old Post 01-24-2013 02:05 PM
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Majestic Tree H
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Nov 2005
Location: New Market Va
Posts: 4670

Hooks are hard to get rid of !!! you have to Kill all surfaces and Ground that the dog lives on !!!

How Hookworms Affect Dogs

Hookworms live most of their lives inside of a dog’s small intestine, where they latch onto the intestinal lining and feed on the dog’s blood. They leave raw, weeping sores at the sites of their bites. Dogs with a heavy hookworm load suffer abdominal pain. In other words, they have bad belly-aches. They also have digestive problems, develop diarrhea, become weak and generally feel lousy. When hookworms penetrate a dog’s skin (usually through its paws), they leave raw wounds at their points of entry.

Symptoms of Hookworms

Young dogs tend to be more severely affected by hookworms than older dogs. When a dog of any age becomes infected with these intestinal parasites, its owner may notice one or more of the following signs:
•Pale mucous membranes (especially, pale gums)
•Dark, tarry stools (from digested blood; known as “melena”)
•Diarrhea
•Constipation
•Poor hair coat
•Poor body condition
•Ill thrift
•Loss of appetite (inappetence; anorexia)
•Weight loss
•Cough (dry, hacking)
•Sores on the paws, especially between the toes (red; infected; presence of pus; caused by the parasites directly penetrating the skin)
•Sudden death

Dogs at Increased Risk

Young dogs, and those with compromised or suppressed immune system function, are more likely to become affected by hookworms than are mature, healthy animals. There is no breed or gender predisposition to infection with these parasites

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Old Post 01-24-2013 02:38 PM
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blueghost
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Dec 2010
Location: Ridgeway V.A
Posts: 352

If he had been treeing it could have came from that if he is a hard tree dog

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Old Post 01-24-2013 04:29 PM
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blocksporthound
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Feb 2012
Location: Rockwell, NC
Posts: 268

Could also be coccidia or giardia as well as hooks.

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Old Post 01-24-2013 10:00 PM
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