No. Human medications and remedies are often in too high of a concentrated dose for domestic animals. The canine's immune system greatly differs with that of a human, which is why we take our animals to a Veterinarian for medical help.
yes, but only if it is to remove warts, and it should not be used on anything much smaller than a cat,
go to the vet. he might have to surgically remove it.
She has a wart on her arm.He couldn't stop looking at her wart.
A wart is a virus.
NO, It says it right there on the back of the box that it is not for moles
yes you can you can get a wart anywhere
Use liver and put it in the freezer?
With Urine. You can use your own or borrow some from a friendly dog or cat. Apply 2 or 3 times daily with a ball of cotton. After about 2 to 4 weeks the wart should be gone.
Finger his a$$ until in comes out
The real answer is wart
You use it for the dude that has snow on his window on his car and when you get the freezer fluid you will use it to help pour.
Your best bet to treat a wart is use a compound W treatment on it. This will freeze the wart itself and after a couple of treatments the wart will just fall off.
They are skin tags.
Dry ice
yes he would, freezer are air tight
go to the vet. he might have to surgically remove it.
you could ask your GP to freeze it off using liquid nitrate or use a wart remover.
The wart medication will most likely work on the dog but it is not recommended. The medication is not for dogs, especially on their head.