Early symptoms of coronavirus in dogs

The early symptoms of coronary disease in dogs are that the dog has no energy, does not eat food, has vomiting, diarrhea, and has porridge-like or watery stools.

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Puppies have more severe symptoms than adult puppies. At the initial stage, the patient vomits undigested food first, and then vomits yellow sour mucus, resulting in acute gastroenteritis-type diarrhea. The feces is thick at first, then thin, and finally watery. The color of feces is orange, gray or green, often mixed with mucus or dark blood.

Some puppies later develop anal incontinence, depression, lying on the ground, lazing around, forcibly giving up, gait shaking, greatly reduced appetite or no appetite, dry nose, sunken eyeballs, and obvious symptoms of dehydration. If there is no immediate rescue and adjustment, the puppies will take 1 to 2 days to Sacrifice in 2 to 4 days. If a puppy gets sick, it can infect the entire litter within a day or two.

Prevention of Coronavirus

1. Clean the puppy kennel every day to remove feces and keep it dry, clean and hygienic. Disinfect thoroughly once a week. The pens for sick puppies should be disinfected with fire disinfection.

2. The feed and drinking water must be clean and hygienic, and no rotten feed or turbid drinking water should be given. The remaining feed and drinking water for sick puppies should be dug in a deep hole and the feeding utensils should be completely disinfected before use.

3. Newly born puppies should eat colostrum. Obtaining maternal antibodies and immune protection is the key method to prevent this disease; puppies without immunity can also be injected into adults. Puppy serum prevents. If one puppy is sick, prevent and treat it for the whole litter.

4. If it is found that the dog has symptoms of virus infection, first carry out a test paper test, and immediately isolate the sick puppy after confirming that it is infected with the virus, and provide nursing care. The feces of sick puppies are collected and sent to provincial and municipal veterinary laboratories for testing to diagnose the disease and administer medication.

If a dog gets a coronary, the dog needs to be sent to the hospital for treatment immediately.

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