Ask the French Bulldog Veterinarian - Poor Itchy Frenchie Pup

admin June 26th, 2008

I purchased my wonderful Frenchie from Petland in September he is actually a year old today. he is my absolute pride and joy.

I would say probably about 2 or 3 months after we brought Tucker home he started scratching his under belly and we didn’t think anything of it until it became a constant thing. I looked at his stomach and his poor little nipples where black and purple, and so irritated red that I took him to the vet closest to me right away.

She said he was just itchy and to give him a bath.  I took him home and bathed him more often  but still he would wake us up in the night with his thumping.

I then took him to my Grandparents vet, who said to change to his food and put him on benadryl. I did that for a few months and then went back because it hadn’t cleared up.

I ended up getting dog polysporin to rub in his belly, and while it helps to clear it up I still need to know what the problem is so I can eliminate it and not have to keep buying t-shirts for him so he doesn’t stain the furniture.

I ended up taking him to a different Vet across the city and he changed his food again and put him on Vanectyl. P.  I do not like the side effect of that drug at all!!

He now has this red scabby thing in his one ear. I just feel so bad for my little man we have taken away everything all his treats.. I just want to get to the bottom of this for him so he can enjoy his puppy life..

Dr. Lori writes -

It sounds like your frenchie is suffering from a common frenchie ailment, skin atopy.  I have addressed this in an article I wrote on skin issues in frenchies which certainly will give you more info than you may want.

I think you need to visit a veterinary dermatologist.  He/she will probably start with skin scrapings and cultures and will most likely suggest allergy testing.  It will be costly to get to the root of the problem, but sounds like he needs some help, as he is so young and already so uncomfortable, and these things tend to worsen with age, so getting a jump on it now will be so very helpful in the long run.

Good Luck!

Lori Hunt, DVM

Ask the Frenchie Trainer - Jumping Bean French Bulldog!

admin June 24th, 2008

We have a very loving frenchie named Roxanne. She is one year old and loves
everyone.

The problem is her jumping. Especially on guests. I try to hold her down by
her collar and tell her “down” repeatedly and praise her when she’s calm
(which is not often) but then she just pops up again like a spring. She is
incredibly strong and knocks over children and sometimes frightens adults or
gets them dirty!

Walks are getting embarrassing!

Any ideas?

Hope writes -

Frenchies just love to jump, don’t they? It can be an annoying and possibly dangerous habit, as you’ve discovered. Fortunately, it’s relatively easy habit to break.

As with any training, stopping the jumping will take a bit of time and patience. Understanding why Roxanne is jumping puts the behavior in perspective. She’s a friendly, happy, loving girl who thrives on attention and wants to share her joy with everyone. It’s essentially saying “Hi! Look at me! Pay attention to me!” and it’s working. The attention she’s getting may be negative - you’re trying to stop the behavior, but it’s reenforcing the act.

Rather than trying to “correct” her for jumping - deprive her of the reward she’s after. Set up a situation with a family member or friend.  Have that person approach Roxanne. As soon as she starts jumping, have the person fold her arms and turn her back on Roxanne. When Roxanne follows and tries it again, have your friend keep turning away, arms folded, ignoring the jumping. As soon as Roxanne tries something else to get attention (most dogs will sit and try to figure out what’s going wrong) have the person praise her, reward her and tell her how wonderful she is. When she gets up, or tries to jump, go right back to the “fold arms and turn away.”

For a while, until she “gets it,” everyone is going to have to treat Roxanne’s jumping the same way. Reward her for behavior you want and ignore the behavior you don’t. Deprive her of the attention she craves when she’s misbehaving. Frenchies are pretty smart - she’ll figure out pretty quickly that being a “good girl” gets her what she wants.

Good luck!
Hope

Ask the Frenchie Vet - French Bulldog Weight at Maturity?

lorihuntdvm June 23rd, 2008

I just had a question on the growth of my frenchie. He is about 16 pounds at 6 months old. Should I expect him to grow much more??

He is a purebred Frenchie, but doesn’t seem to have as big as bodies as other french bulldogs I see in pictures.

Dr. Lori writes -

Hi there…

Different frenchie lines grow at different paces and have different body types. Yours may simply be a leaner more “terrier” type frenchie.

Your breeder may be able to give you and idea of what she expects his adult size to be.  If he is 16# at 6 months, I would expect him to be about 22-24# when full grown.  They seem to be about 75% grown by his age.

Dr. Lori Hunt, DVM

Ask the French Bulldog Breeder - Difficulty Breeding Frenchies

admin June 22nd, 2008

We are having a difficult time breeding our Frenchies. We have a 3 yo male and a 2yo female.

He mounts her, but never gets penetration. She acts like what the hell is going on here. We tried holding her, but the male looses interest quickly.
We need some direction to get this done. Any help or reference is appreciated.

Pat writes -
Almost all French Bulldog matings are done by artificial insemination.
If you are prepared to have a french bulldog litter - which entails a c-section and at least 3 weeks (maybe longer) of constant baby sitting (and I mean you must take time from work, so that someone can be with your gril and the babies 24/7) Then I highly recommend that find a vet who is knowledgeable of AI techniques (and he should have done a number of them - not just read about it in a book).
However if you have not researched the care, breeding, whelping and care of french bulldog puppies - you would be well advised to skip this cycle and do some research so that you are better prepared to make the right decisons for your dogs…
Breeding a french bulldog litter is not to be undertaken lightly… There is the joy of pups - if you are lucky.. - BUT you can loose your bitch, or the entire litter, or some of the pups can be mal-formed AND you will have to have a c-section - which requires that you have a vet that will work with you in the middle of the nite or on a holiday weekend… If you do not have an experienced c-section vet on board, and ready and willing to help you - you should NOT breed your girl… If the vet doesn’t know what he is doing he can kill your bitch AND the pups…
I’m not trying to talk you out of breeding your girl - but it is obvious that you have not done your research.. I Suggest in the most intense way I can that you NOT breed her this cycle - AND do the necesarry reserch and find a mentor (an experienced French Bulldog Breeder) who will work with you and help you find a good vet and help you get the stuff you need for your girl and her pups…
And no frenchie pups are not just like other pups. They need much more intense care than many other breeds…
Good luck
Pat

Ask the French Bulldog Geek - Raw kills dogs?

bullmarketfrogs June 21st, 2008

Hi there - I was going to switch my French Bulldog Angus McGoof over to raw food. I have heard a lot of good stuff about it.

But my veterinarian told me not to because she said raw food can kill my dog!! I bought a really good book called Give Your Dog a Bone and it seems reasonable but now I am afriad to.

My vet says if I feed Angus raw I should get a new vet. What should I do?

Carol writes-

Well, first off - love Angus’ name!

That said, I was personally quite surprised to learn that there are still veterinarians around who are so vehemently opposed to raw feeding. As a long time raw feeder who is acquainted with literally hundreds of other raw feeders, I’m always taken aback to learn how many misconceptions there are about raw feeding.

However, after making inquiries among the vets I speak to, I discovered that veterinarians might have a very valid reason for advising their patients against feeding raw - legal repercussions. Many veterinary associations, including the AVMA and the CVMA, have issued policy statements in which they advise their member veterinarians to not recommend raw diets to their patients. The basic suggestion in their statements is that doing so could leave veterinarians open to legal action from patients unhappy with the results of raw feeding. There’s also a subtle implication that veterinarians who recommend raw, or remain neutral on the topic when patients raise it, might be engaging in behaviour the associations consider to be professional misconduct. This has left some veterinarians, even the ones who personally feed raw and consider it to be a valid choice for pet nutrition, reluctant to leave themselves ‘hanging in the wind’ legally by recommending it to their patients.

Personally, I’ve been feeding my dogs raw, in one form or another, for almost 11 years now. In that time, I’ve never had an issue with salmonella or any other form of contamination (although apparently it’s unsafe to eat tomatoes in Canada or the USA right now). After all, it all comes down to proper food handling - washing hands and surfaces, not letting raw sit out at room temperature. The sorts of common sense things we should be doing when preparing our own food.

I decided to ask some other French Bulldog owners about their experiences feeding raw. In the process, I also learned some interesting facts about why Veterinary Medical associations are so adamantly against their member vets recommending it to patients.

Michelle writes -

I have been feeding raw for 8 yrs. All of my dogs are healthy. I started by reading Give your dog a bone. Great book!

Charlotte writes -

I’ve been feeding raw food for the past five years. I recently lost a French Bulldog to old age - 13 1/2 - which is quite an accomplishment for this breed, and I have two hale and hearty Frenchies at 16 months and 10 1/2, as well as a Pug, 4, who eat raw and thrive on it. As an added bonus, I have no problem with canine allergies, gas, and my dogs urinate less because they are not processing large amounts of grain. The 10 year old suffered from serious ear infections and hot spots - he has not had an ear infection or a hot spot since he went on raw 5 years ago. The 13 1/2 year old that recently died suffered from severe gastric pain and allergies, those went away when he went on raw.

I cannot imagine going back to standard dog food after feeding raw.

Shirley writes -

I have been feeding raw for years - I have never had any problems. The difference in my raw fed and raised puppies compared to kibble fed puppies is like night and day my puppies have solid hard bodies and great muscle development and the kibble kids are almost boney compared to them. I also have a 13 year old and a 9 year old and an 8 year old male all very healthy and my oldest boy sired a litter at age 10 - so yep I am a great believer of raw food.

Wendy writes -

I have a 2 year old Frenchie that has eaten raw from 8 weeks on. She has only been sick 2 times; once with an ear infection and once after eating some chicken jerky that was recalled (later). She has a tendency to swell up with vaccine administration and we prophylax her with benadryl. Other than that she never is sick, rarely needs to see the vet and is full of vim and vigor. Her coat is beautiful, she does not have skin issues and her teeth are nice and white.

I do chop the boney meat into small pieces for her.

Good point, Wendy. I grind my raw chicken on the bone - no matter what the books tell you, most Frenchies just aren’t able to chew through the bone, meat and tendon of a raw chicken piece without there being a real choking hazard.

I suppose at the end of the day that you have to weigh up what matters to you - do you want to feed raw to Angus badly enough that you’re willing to find a new veterinarian? An even better question to ask yourself, in my opinion, would be “Do I like this veterinarian enough to put up with her blackmailing me out of my personal choice in pet nutrition?”.

A veterinarian and patient should be able to engage in dialog as two equal adults, and not as ‘punishing parent, chastised child’.

Carol

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