With early treatment, about 90 percent of affected dogs recover from Pyometra. If treatment is not performed quickly, the toxic effects from the bacteria will be fatal. Dogs with Pyometra often become severely ill very rapidly.
The answer to this is unknown. Pyometra is an infection of the uterus, so it is possible that if a female dog was mated an infectious organism may have been introduced. However, all animals have numerous natural mechanisms to prevent this, so it is extremely unlikely.
Pyometra is known to occur spontaneously in ALL intact female dogs, with the risk becoming greater from the age of 3 or 4 onwards, and getting higher as she ages. It is best for your dog to get spayed as soon as possible if she is not going to breed, or as soon as she has had as many litters of puppies as you want from her.
It is a MYTH that female dogs need to have a litter of puppies! Breeding can be VERY expensive, and dangerous for your dog - get her spayed unless you really know what you're doing!
If the dog was pregnant before the pyometra set in, yes it is possible she could deliver puppies. However, pyometra is an infection in the uterus, which means there is a significant chance the puppies have already died. Also, since the uterus is infected, the risk of uterine rupture during normal labor contractions is pretty high.
If I had a pregnant female dog with term puppies and pyometra, I would have a veterinary surgeon perform a combination C-section/spay on her - remove the uterus, get out any living puppies, then remove her ovaries so that she doesn't cycle any more.
Yes, your dog can give birth after and at 50 days of birth.
i chose a dog
A dog at the age of 1-2 is too young to give birth!
some female dogs that are not spayed may develop Pyometra which is an infection of the uterus. There is 'internal' Pyometra and 'external' Pyometra. With external, the dog will have a smelly discharge (typically after they have been in season). With internal there won't be any discharge and is therefore harder to detect. The condition is very serious and you are racing against time to save the life of your dog. Treatment requires removal of the uterus.
like a dog
NO
No.
Can I give my dog a bath befor she hav her babes
Depends on it size and the dog size and how many it is giving birth too
it will die
Don't let your dog mate or neuter/spay your dog.