Dear Adam:
I have beneficial your advice predominance both your book and your tapes.
My masculine Bichon is a unqualified shipshape misshapen, humane yet playful, minds well, and treats me as the pack leader. He comes when I call, goes in his crate at night with only one " kennel up " command and is a general all around good dog.
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One problem that I have been unable to break him of is scratching his neck area to the point that it bleeds. He knows that he shouldn ' t do this and quits immediately when I say something to him. I have taken him to the vet on three separate occasions.
He has received an antihistamine shot, been treated with Cortaid and anti - itch spray, had flee treatment, bathed with hypo allergenic shampoo and conditioner, been given a special diet, and none of this made any difference. The last visit to the vet he prescribed a mild tranquilizer coupled with hormone treatment. He quit scratching almost immediately but he was somewhat lethargic. I cut out the hormone treatment and cut his tranquilizer in half, under advisement of the vet. He now scratches only moderately but I am hesitant to increase his tranquilizer dosage back up to where it was. Also, I don ' t see any end to this form of treatment. As a trainer I wondered if you had ever encountered this before and whether you had any recommendations I might try other than the tranquilizer. In my opinion this just masks the problem and does not fix it. I would appreciate any suggestions you might have.
Sincerely,
Gordon
Gordon,
No, this is most likely a physical problem... not a behavioral one.
You might try finding another vet. to get a second opinion and see another approach to it. My question would be: Why is he scratching? It ' s not the collar, is it?
[Gordon replies: ] Since he started scratching ( about 3 months ago ) he has not worn a collar. One vet shaved his neck area and it shows no sign of any irritation. I believe it to be something psychological and the vet ( I have seen two ) tends to agree with me; ergo, the tranquilizer. In any event I do appreciate you responding.
[Adam: ] You might look into anti - anxiety drugs, if you feel this is the case. Have your veterinarian call around and find out. Prozac - type drugs will probably work better than just tranquilizing the dog.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
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