Most canine vaccinations are subcutaneous, meaning they should be injected below the skin. Veterinarians tend to use the excess skin over the shoulders as a good place to inject veterinarians - it is easy to access and has a lot of room for vaccines to go.
Read more about this here in the related link. I would ask my vet first.
in the muscles of the neck
Yes, the Hamstring muscle is a common site for giving an IM injection to a canine. Be sure to watch of for the Sciatic nerve!
It might be one of the side effects of the injections (nausea or vomiting). Check with the veterinarian who gave your dog the injections to see if this is a normal reaction, like a side effect, or something much more serious.
yes because the injections stop it from getting deseases
You have to wash the site of injury with tap water and soap as early as possible. If soap is not available, the plane water will do. You may go to the nearby family physician. He will wash the site with mild soap and saline. You will be prescribed five to six injections of anti-rabies vaccine by your physician. Your physician may decide to give immunoglobulin injection to you. If the dog survive for ten days, you may be given only three injections of anti-rabies drug. Never ever take the dog bite lightly. It can be fatal mistake.
Yes, just like humans, dogs will feel injections.
It will help. But what will help the most is if you brush your dog after giving him showers.
no it can not
basically bathing your dog!
my dog just laid around for about a day or two but after that he was back to normal
They generally don't do anything. They just swing their tail. They think that we are giving something to them. But if the person is familiar to dog, the dog will generally expect something else like food, toy etc
It is unlikely, but sometimes the injections fail and the dog is still able to have pups.
Yes they can be but it depends it what society, what sort of dog and the injections/ health treatment they have been given