How To Perform the Heimlich Maneuver on Dogs

 



  December 16, 2017


Do you know what to do if your dog is choking? Knowing a few emergency procedures, such as CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) and the Heimlich maneuver for dogs, is critical to saving lives because you may not have time to get to a vet and your dog could suffocate.

Dogs love to chew bones, sticks, toys, socks and anything small enough to fit into their mouths. But on occasion, an object may become dangerously lodged in your dog’s throat or windpipe.

If your dog is choking and suffocating, he will likely panic. A dog signals he is choking by either: coughing violently, wheezing, gasping for breath, pawing at his mouth, and/or has his eyes bulging out.

1. Check your dog’s mouth for the lodged object

If your dog cannot clear the object from his throat himself within a few seconds, immediately check your dog’s mouth. Always be extremely careful when attempting to remove anything from your pet’s mouth because you could push the object farther down your dog’s throat, tear at the throat tissue, damage a dog’s throat bones, or get bitten in the process.

  • Open your dog’s mouth. Put one hand on the upper jaw with your thumb on one side and your other fingers on the other side.
  • With your other hand, push gently down on the lower jaw, and keep your index finger free to sweep to the back of your dog’s mouth.
  • Look inside the mouth to see if you can see the obstruction and reach it with your fingers.
  • Do not grab something you simply feel. Dogs have small bones that support the tongue, so you can seriously injure them if you assume the bones are a foreign object.
  • If you do see the object, be very careful not to push the object further down your dog’s throat and do not attempt to extract it if it does not come out easily.



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