yes
My dog had parvo and we learned to give the dog have a pill of Tylenol and pepto bismal
Parvo is caught by inhaling, eating, bacteria from poo. You should give all puppies their full set of vaccinations, parvo is really dangerous and unless you want your puppy to die you should give it its vaccinations
Technically you can, but it would be unlikely. A high dose of parvo would come from being in contact with infected feces. Also, if you feel that your dog may be in danger of parvo and you can't afford the vet bills there is a company that will help diagnose your dog for free look up they were very helpful for me.
You should not give anything to a puppy without a vets recommendation, and they will not give that without seeing the pup. An animals metabolism is much different than that of a humans and you could cause harm, especially to a pup.
An emergancy Vet visit.
No!! The only treatment is hydration and veterinary care
It depends on the medication and treatments required. They may include IV fluids, antidiarrheal medications, anti-vomitting medications, and other medications all of which can add up fast as parvo is a difficult disease to treat or cure.
The parvo virus is very dangerous and an infection can irreparable damage to your puppy. Talk to your doctor and make sure you give him all the booster shots to ensure that he is healthy.
Actually, dogs with parvo are easily become dehydrated so you should give him a lot or as long as he want. But puppies with parvo dont eat or drink so we have to force them with water (Never im foods) So use a srynge and give him 8drops of pedialyte on small srynge. (Full) That should be 50/50 at first. 50% water 50% pedialyte. You will do it every hour. If he didnt vomit for 3hours, stop giving him Pedialyte and try giving him Chicken broth. If you have to put it on a syringe, put it. You can also mix a dietary suplement with chicken broth and put it on sryinge and force him to eat it. Theost important thing you can do about your parvo-puppy is to keep an eye on him, pray for him and KEEP HIM DEHYDRATED and the pedialyte would help.
No, and it is not good to give animals medication designed for humans without vet guidance. Many human medications can kill an animal. Parvo does not just cause stomach issues. It can attack their heart and immune systems. If a dog has parvo, it is very important to get them to a vet ASAP. This is a disease that can quickly kill an animal. They will need aggressive treatment for about a week, including IVs and a variety of medications.
Well as a survivor of Parvo I don't have to tell you what a mean nasty virus it is. And as bad as it was for your dog, imagine what it would do to an entire litter of week old puppies. That being said the answer relies alot on how you dealt with it and where your dog is. Parvo can live in the environment for up to 6 years. It doesn't matter how cold it gets or how hot and dry it's been... Parvo's one tough bugger. And oddly enough it's tougher to kill Parvo in your house than it is outside. If your dog was kenneled outside on a concrete slab that gets bleached weekly (like it should) and at least a year or two has passed (for the virus to runs it's course through the local wildlife) then you're probably safe. If you have moved since she's had Parvo... you're definitely safe. If your dog was kept inside and you still live there I would caution against breeding her. It's really all a judgment call you should be talking to your vet about and not somebody on the internet. The fact is now that she has survived Parvo it makes the antigens in her milk stronger and more resistant to the Parvovirus. Does that mean you can get away with not vaccinating? Heck NO!!! Check with your Vet and most likely they'll want to give a Parvo shot at 5 weeks before going into the normal 6, 9, 12, and 15 week round of shots. But for those first 5 weeks I would be sweating bullets if I were in your shoes.
no i dont think so but make sure you check with your local vet