Poisoning is a deliberate act intended to cause medical issues, up to and including death, in a targeted animal. Veterinarians will generally use the term "intoxication", which does not imply malicious intent.
Signs of intoxication vary depending upon the causative agent. Some chemicals have a first sign of sudden death, particularly if the dose was extremely high. Other chemicals cause central nervous system deficits such as drooling, incoordination, seizures or collapse. Still other classes cause hematologic deficits, such as acute anemia, clotting factor disruption resulting in uncontrolled hemorrhage.
Often intoxication is recognized after treatment has been initiated, so it's hard to tell at home that your dog has been poisoned or intoxicated. However, sudden onset of abnormal clinical signs such as those listed above would be a good reason to take your dog to a veterinarian immediately - even if your dog hasn't been poisoned, these conditions need to be diagnosed and treated quickly.
call poison control.
Take the dog to the vet immedeatly this can kill a dog!
Your dog may develop a rash several days to a week after ingesting some types of rat poison because it is having a bleeding crisis. One type of rat poison works by eliminating Vitamin K from the body, which keeps the dog from being able to clot its blood. Over time, this will kill the dog (and is how it kills rats, too) unless it is treated by a veterinarian. If you know that your dog recently ate rat poison, get it to the veterinarian immediately - this is a medical emergency.
you can give a cookie for lunch i will like that for a snack thank you i
No, it could not, because the poison was specifically designed to kill rats, and was developed as a rat poison/killer, not a human poison/killer. It would still be considered rat poison, even if the human died from the rat poison.
This will depend upon the type of rat poison. If it is a Vitamin K-inhibiting poision, yes your dog could still die even though she is not showing symptoms of intoxication 24 hours after eating the poison. You can call the ASPCA's toxicology hotline and see if the rat poison your dog ate could still be affecting your dog. This is a common intoxication for pets and the operators should be able to help answer your questions.
Yes, the dog can die if it eats a poisoned rat. The toxins are still present in the rat, and can affect the dog quite quickly. It would need to be taken to a veterinarian immediately.
You are an idiot that needs to be in prison. Why don't YOU take the rat poison yourself
I am not so sure if it is necessary, but i can tell you what to do. Call a vet. Or maybe a poison control. I think either one will work.
wait till she throws up or help her to throw up.
Giving a dog coffee and milk after it has already swallowed rat poison is a bad idea - the caffeine in coffee can be dangerous to dogs, and the dog is already suffering from rat poison intoxication. Also, milk is not healthy for dogs - most (like most adult mammals excepting humans) are lactose-intolerant, so you can induce stomach cramps and diarrhea on top of the problems from the rat poison. Your best option is to grab the rat poison container and the dog and head to the vet for examination and treatment.
Your dog is pretty much dead.