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How Much Chocolate Is Too Much?


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ARGH!!!

We were given a cadbury's chocolate stocking each at Christmas - and it seems Amelie has figered out how to get things off a rather high shelf!!

Just arrived home to find Amelie and Chico fighting over a Twirl :D

Now missing are almost all of (less the debris scattered all over the carpet :rofl: )

TWO plain chocolate bars

TWO twirl bars

TWO Crunchies

TWO time outs

They just left us the freddo frogs :)

THAT'S MORE THAN 200 GRAMS OF CHOCOLATE EACH

I think Amelie has had most of it - by the size of her belly though ;)

What can we do?? Expecting them to be quite unwell tonight - I'm tempted to throw both of them outside for the night - but perhaps should be keeping an eye on them???????????? :eek:

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OK - found this - but the calculations?? Amelie is about 5.5kg - more or less - we weighed her two weeks ago and I only vaguely remember...

The good news is that it takes, on average, a fairly large amount of theobromine 100-150 mg/kg to cause a toxic reaction. Although there are variables to consider like the individual sensitivity, animal size and chocolate concentration.

On average,

Milk chocolate contains 44 mg of theobromine per oz.

Using a dose of 100 mg/kg as the toxic dose it comes out roughly as:

1 ounce per 1 pound of body weight for Milk chocolate

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"Chocolate contains theobromine (a compound similar to caffeine) which is poisonous to dogs. A dose of 50 mg/lb can be fatal to a dog. Milk chocolate contains 45 mg of theobromine per ounce and unsweetened baking chocolate contains 400 mg per ounce. Just one ounce of unsweetened baking chocolate can kill a small breed dog. Theobromine when ingested by dogs causes release of epinephrine (adrenaline) which causes the heart to race and serious cardiac arrhythmias to develop. Signs of chocolate poisoning in dogs include vomiting, diarrhea, excessive urination, hyperactivity followed by depression and coma, seizures, and death. "

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Posted at the same time..........

Give them some very burnt toast, apparently this helps...something to do with charcoal absorbing it. Can't hurt to try anyway.

From the same site

If you suspect your dog has ingested chocolate, call your veterinarian immediately. With their instruction you may be able to induce vomiting greatly increasing the odds of your pet surviving. Time is of the essence in these cases - seek emergency care immediately if chocolate has been consumed.

Edited by dru
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Keyword is potentially!

The 100mg/kg is the figure that I remember - and from the range you quoted there are 45mg in 60g of milk chocolate, very roughly 100g / kg making a dog very sick.

My boss and I did a calculation once and I think we established that 2 rows of a "normal" Cadbury block (what is that? 250g?) would make a Chihuahua sick (that was the dog we were dealing with at the time).

Of course, it is all variable - I suggest you keep a close eye on them, not sure about inducing vomiting (I can check) but charcoal should be fine. Keep tabs on high heart rates at rest, a really bounding heart beat and signs of distress - and know where an after hours vet is.

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Call the nearest animal hospital and ask for advise, ASAP.

Jinta once ate almost a whole family block of chocie and she was ok. I did however call vet hospital at strathfield, and they said if she showed signs to bring her in. IM not saying all will be well, but it may not be as disasterous as your thinking?

Call the vet, and they can help you with how to induce vomiting.

Goodluck.

Jinta was a pup when she did that,(under 6 months, weighed approx, 9kgs. so I dont go into a full scale panic unless its more than a large size block of dove chocolate.

(id be alot more concerned if theyed eaten a mud cake....FULL of the dangerous cooking chocolate, it has the highest concerntration of the bad chemicals.)

Edited by Jintanut
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Cooking and dark chocolate are definately worse.

Not sure of the dose of peroxide, I think its an arbitrary few drops, but I will have to check before you quote me on that! A specialist centre is best equipped to answer these type of questions - happy to help but would try calling one - they're staffed 24 hours.

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Anne i didnt mean to sound like i was trashing you, im sure you wouldnt hurt a dog. It was more suprise, that peroxide would be an option. I think I might have even read of it before somewhere.

If you could have seen my face, you would know what i mean. I hate how written word can easily be confused.

Ive been doing cleaning all day, and my hands smell of domestos, the thought of drinking peroxide freaks me out. I doubt i could get Jinta to drink even the most diluted solution of that. :eek:

I think id prefer to use a stomache pump, at the vets.

Im no vet and of course have no idea.

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Peroxide can be (and is widely) used to induce vomiting however because of the fairly long list of complications I'm hesitant to provide a dose rate while knowing very little about the situation.

The "nicest" effective method of inducing vomiting is apomorphine however that needs to be administered by a vet. Wouldn't recommend salt, as if it isn't effective, it can cause its own set of problems.

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