FDA Warns About Accidental Overdose Risk of Noise Aversion Drug Sileo

The Fourth of July is no holiday for many dogs who are terrified by the sound of fireworks. If you plan on giving your dog the noise aversion drug Sileo, please take heed of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s continued warning to avoid an accidental overdose.

Since the prescription gel Sileo was introduced just two years ago, the FDA has received 54 adverse event reports from dog owners. The problem is that Sileo is packaged in an oral dosing syringe with a ring-stop mechanism on the plunger that must be turned and locked into place to set the correct dose — and the ring-stop mechanism does not always lock, causing an overdose.

Last year the FDA advised Sileo’s manufacturer, Zoetis, to improve the product’s labeling to emphasize the need to secure the ring-stop mechanism. Zoetis changed the labeling and added videos on its website that show how to properly administer Sileo.

Yet the FDA reissued an advisory today about Sileo “because adverse events are continuing to occur,” it stated. “The agency continues to advise veterinarians to carefully educate owners and handlers how to properly use the syringe to avoid accidental overdosing.”

Fortunately, no dogs have died — yet. But some have experienced the clinical signs of an overdose, which include loss of consciousness, trouble breathing, impaired balance, muscle tremors, slow heart rate, low blood pressure and lethargy. The FDA says it has not determined whether the overdoses were caused by improper use of the ring-stop mechanism.

If you still want to give your dog Sileo, make sure your veterinarian shows you exactly how to use the syringe. Be sure to keep an eye on your dog for any of the above symptoms of an overdose, and and immediately contact your vet or an emergency animal hospital if your dog shows any of these signs.

Noise Aversion without Drugs

My dogs Leroy and Ella luckily have no fear of fireworks, but that wasn’t the case years ago with my dogs Larry and Sophie. Once, and only once, I gave them a sedative prescribed by their veterinarian to help relax them on the Fourth of July. They did sleep through most of the noise, but then I read that tranquilizers don’t actually help relieve the anxiety of dogs and cats. In fact, drugs like acepromazine are like a “chemical straitjacket,” according to Dr. James Nicholas.

“This is because acepromazine does little to nothing to help mitigate the fear and anxiety that these suffering pets experience from fireworks and thunderstorms,” Dr. Nicholas wrote. “What it does do though, and do well, is make them unable to move and/or exhibit any of the other outward signs of their fear and anxiety.”

The following Fourth of July, I created a “safe room” in the bathroom, with their beds, toys and a radio loudly playing classical music. Larry and Sophie were still a little agitated, but much less so than in previous years. Even after the holiday, the dogs would instinctively run into the bathroom when they heard a firecracker or other loud noise. One time I had the radio on while cleaning the house, and the dogs suddenly retreated to their safe room. Why? The song “You Dropped a Bomb on Me” by the Gap Band, which includes fireworks sound effects, was playing!

If you want your dog to have a safe and sane Fourth of July without drugs, here are some helpful tips I’ve compiled from American Humane and Humane Society of the United States.

Do:

  • Bring your dog inside your home.
  • Play loud music, or turn up the volume on the TV or radio.
  • Create a “safe area” in a bathroom or other quiet, escape-proof spot, filled with blankets and your dog’s favorite toys.
  • If possible, have someone stay with your dog if you’re going to a fireworks display or party.

Don’t:

  • Coddle your dog by saying something like, “It’s okay” or “Poor baby!” Just act naturally and go about your business as usual.
  • Take your dog to fireworks displays. (Duh.)

Photo: anneheathen

 

 

2 Dogs Trapped Near Hawaii Lava Flow Rescued After 10 Days

Carol Hosley’s two small rescued dogs, a Jack Russell/Pug mix named Brus and a terrier mix named Little Dude, are both terrified of men, probably due to their previous abusive owners.

Hosley lives on Hawaii’s Big Island. When firefighters arrived at her apartment earlier this month to help her evacuate because of the lava flowing from the Kilauea volcano, Brus and Little Dude were spooked and ran away.

To help find the two, Hosley enlisted the help of Aloha Ilio Rescue, the nonprofit group from which she rescued Brus just six months ago. For 10 days, searchers looked everywhere for Brus and Little Dude. “[W]e’ve just kept going back, and going back,” Daylynn Kyles, president of the rescue, told Hawaii News Now.

Kyles and two friends finally found the dogs yesterday morning — in an extremely dangerous predicament near the volcano’s 17th fissure. “They were stuck behind a fence, and they couldn’t get out because the lava had surrounded them,” Kyles said. “It was crazy.”

To rescue Brus and Little Dude, Kyles and her companions crawled through the grass and over the fence line. Although the two dogs were terrified and had been bitten by red ants, they were otherwise okay, considering their ordeal.

Hosley may have lost some personal belongings, but she is more than thrilled that the lives of her two precious dogs have been saved thanks to the bravery of Kyles and her friends. Brus and Little Dude are temporarily staying at Aloha Ilio Rescue until Hosley can find permanent housing.

“I just couldn’t be happier,” Hosley told Hawaii News Now. “The other stuff is stuff, but I got the dogs.”

Aloha Ilio Rescue saves about 600 dogs a year on the Big Island. It relies on donations to continue rescuing these dogs — and with the Kilauea disaster happening, it could especially use them now.

Photos: Aloha Ilio Rescue/Facebook

Monster Who Tortured Puppy Doe Sentenced to Up to 10 Years in Prison

One of the most disturbing cases of animal abuse that I’m aware of was that of Puppy Doe, a young Pit Bull who was given away by her original owners when their landlord decided to ban the breed due to high insurance rates.

Puppy Doe, also known as Kiya, eventually ended up with Radoslaw Czerkawski, a Polish national living illegally in the U.S. on an expired work visa. Czerkawski starved the puppy and inflicted upon her what a veterinarian described as medieval-style torture. This monster systematically pulled her joints apart one by one, split her tongue in half, stabbed her in the eye and burned her. When the 95-year-old woman he was living with and a caregiver for died in August 2013, Czerkawski dumped the puppy in a wooded area.

When a good Samaritan found Puppy Doe, she thought the dog had been hit by a car due to the severity of her injuries. Tragically, Puppy Doe had to be euthanized, but during her final hours she was shown what it’s like to be loved by the caring staff of the Animal Rescue League of Boston.

Czerkawski was arrested after Puppy Doe’s blood splatter was found in the elderly woman’s home. His cell phone records indicated he had bought the dog from her second owner via a Craigslist ad. He was charged with 12 counts of animal cruelty, and he was later convicted of a larceny charge for stealing more than $130,000 from the elderly woman.

The animal cruelty trial was originally set for early 2015, but it was repeatedly postponed.

Finally, nearly five years after Puppy Doe’s horrific ordeal, Czerkawski’s trial began earlier this month in Dedham, Mass. And, finally, there is some justice for Puppy Doe: This week the jury found Czerkawski guilty of all 12 counts of animal cruelty.

Although the judge could have sentenced Czerkawski to 55 years in prison, he was sentenced to only eight to 10 years, followed by two years of probation. Also, Czerkawski cannot ever own, care for, or come in contact with any animal, or volunteer where animals are present.

Czerkawski is already serving time for the larceny charge, so he could be out of prison in just a few years. Still, the Animal Rescue League of Boston called the sentencing “a historic day for animal welfare in Massachusetts.”

“With the conviction and sentencing of Radoslaw Czerkawski, it has been demonstrated that people who commit animal cruelty, and in this case extreme cruelty, will be held accountable,” it stated on its Facebook page. “Ironically Puppy Doe’s short and tragic life was the impetus for stronger laws protecting all animals in the Commonwealth–and there’s still more work to do.”

Thanks to poor Puppy Doe, animal cruelty laws have been strengthened in Massachusetts since Czerkawski was arrested back in 2013. The maximum sentence for a first offense, which used to be five years, increased to seven years. Subsequent offenses have a maximum sentence of 10 years. The fines were raised from $2,500 for a first offense to $5,000, and up to $10,000 for subsequent offenses.

While eight to 10 years doesn’t seem like nearly long enough for what that despicable monster did to Puppy Doe, at least her case will hopefully prevent other animals from suffering so much cruelty.

Rest in peace, Kiya.

Photo: Animal Rescue League of Boston

Trial Finally Begins in Horrific ‘Puppy Doe’ Abuse Case

UPDATE: Radoslaw Czerkawski was found guilty of all 12 charges of animal cruelty and sentenced to eight to 10 years in prison.

As I wrote on this blog back in 2014, one of the most horrific and disturbing animal abuse cases I’d ever written about was that of a young Pit Bull called Puppy Doe. Four years later, this still remains true. And now, finally, there may soon be justice for this tortured puppy. The trial of her alleged abuser, Radoslaw Czerkawski, began today in Dedham, Mass.

If you’re unfamiliar with the sad tale of Puppy Doe, here’s her story. When she was known as Kiya, her original owners gave her away via a Craigslist ad when their landlord decided to ban Pit Bulls due to high insurance rates. Kiya eventually ended up with Radoslaw Czerkawski, who allegedly starved her and inflicted what the Boston Herald called “medieval-style torture” on the helpless dog. This monster systematically pulled her joints apart, split her tongue in half, stabbed her in the eye and burned her.

Czerkawski, a Polish national living illegally in the U.S. on an expired work visa, was the live-in caretaker for an elderly woman with dementia in Quincy, Mass. When the woman died in late August 2013, Czerkawski dumped Kiya in a nearby wooded area. She was discovered by someone who thought she’d been hit by a car, because her injuries were so severe.

Tragically, Kiya had to be euthanized due to the extent of her injuries. Her final hours were spent being pampered and loved by the staff of the Animal Rescue League of Boston.

Two months later, Czerkawski was arrested after Kiya’s blood splatter was found in the elderly woman’s home. His cell phone records indicated he had bought Kiya from her second owner via a Craigslist ad. He was charged with 12 counts of animal cruelty along with a larceny charge for stealing more than $100,000 from the elderly woman. His trial was originally set for early 2015, but has been repeatedly postponed.

In the meantime, thanks to poor “Puppy Doe,” animal cruelty laws have been strengthened in Massachusetts. The maximum sentence for a first offense, which used to be five years, increased to seven years. Subsequent offenses have a maximum sentence of 10 years. The fines were raised from $2,500 for a first offense to $5,000, and up to $10,000 for subsequent offenses.

“It’s almost like we’re in this period in animal cruelty that’s ‘before Puppy Doe’ and ‘after Puppy Doe,’” Rob Halpin, spokesman for MSPCA-Angell, told the Boston Globe in 2014. “Puppy Doe made a large and permanent crack in the status quo.”

Potential Jurors Asked About Their Opinions of Pit Bulls

Four and a half years after “Puppy Doe” was tortured, selection of the 16-member jury for Czerkawski’s trial in the Norfolk Superior Court began Tuesday. To keep protesters away during the jury selection and trial, a 500-foot buffer zone patrolled by police has been set up around the courthouse. Six Puppy Doe supporters, including Deanna Terminiello, director of the group Pawsitively Puppy Doe, were allowed to sit in the courtroom.

“We don’t want to cause any problems. We do want to follow the judge’s orders. We don’t want to potentially cause a mistrial in this case,” Terminiello told WCVB.

The first day of jury selection, which the Boston Herald called an “arduous” process, 52 prospective jurors were dismissed because they’d either already formed an opinion of the case, were biased about it or had seen pretrial publicity regarding Puppy Doe.

The potential jurors were apparently asked to say something good about Pit Bulls, which really bothers me — did Kiya’s breed have anything to do with the fact that she was tortured? Yet Kiya would probably be alive today if her original owners didn’t have to give her up because of their landlord’s high insurance rates. As I wrote for Care2.com, it’s a sad and very unfair fact that most major insurance companies won’t provide home insurance to owners of Pit Bulls (or Rottweilers, Dobermans or other “dangerous” breeds).

The jury selection process ended Wednesday. “Two of the seven selected jurors own dogs — one of them a puppy,” the Boston Herald reports. “And while remaining silent when afforded the chance to volunteer something good about pit bulls, four later told the court they blame bad owners for bad canine behavior.”

During the selection process, the Boston Herald reports that Czerkawski dozed off, stared into space and barely glanced at the jury pool when told to do so by his attorney, Larry Tipton.

Trial to Last 3 Weeks

The trial is expected to last about three weeks. Opening arguments began this morning, according to the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office. About 50 witnesses are expected to take the stand, including police officers, animal control officers and shelter staff.

“I think it’s going to be horrendous to listen to,” Terminiello told the Boston Herald. “We’ve all been so extremely emotional. It’s caused mental distress for so many. I can’t even tell you how many people have gone through depression and anxiety because of this case, including myself.”

The maximum sentence Czerkawski is facing is 55 years in prison. As Terminiello told WCVB, “You know, it still doesn’t bring her back, but we do get some justice.”

Photo: Animal Rescue League of Boston

Show Dogs, Schmo Dogs: New ‘American Rescue Dog Show’ Features Prizeworthy Mutts

March 21, 2018 Update: Good news — the Hallmark Channel announced today that the “American Rescue Dog Show” will become an annual event each February! The inaugural show “successfully competed against (and bested) the best known pure breed dog show in the world,” according to the Hallmark Channel. In other words, mutts rule, purebreds drool.

If you were watching the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show last week and, like me, wished there was a show that honored mixed breeds and rescue dogs (by the way, was that was a big cotton ball or an actual dog that won the Best in Show title?!), we’re in luck: The “2018 American Rescue Dog Show” makes its debut on the Hallmark Channel Feb. 19.

Unlike the WKC show, whose competitors have to comply to certain physical standards — some of which can cause serious health issues — the “American Rescue Dog Show” will award dogs rescued from shelters across the country for what they do best: There are prizes for, among other things, Best in Couch Potato, Best in Wiggle Butt, Best in Underbite, Best in Snoring and Best in Kissing. The top dog in each category will then vie for the top honor of Best in Rescue.

The purpose of the “2018 American Rescue Dog Show” is to spotlight rescued mixed-breed and purebred dogs with the hope they’ll inspire viewers to adopt their next four-legged family member from a shelter or rescue organization.

Hosted by Rebecca Romijn and Rich Eisen, the celebrity judges will include Linda Blair (whom I interviewed a few years back at the Pit Bull rescue she founded, the Linda Blair Worldheart Foundation), Rick Springfield (who had one of the best album covers ever, IMHO), and dog trainers Brandon McMillan and Andrea Arden.

“We are proud to honor rescue pets and raise awareness of how truly special these animals are,” said Bill Abbott, president and CEO of the Hallmark Channel’s parent company, Crown Media Family Networks, in a press release. “There are beautiful animals available at local shelters and we encourage our viewers to choose adoption through our pet programming, which is at the heart of our brand.”

“The pedigree of these dogs,” says the Hallmark Channel, “is pure love.” I think we can all agree that’s the very best kind of pedigree.

This isn’t the first TV special to feature rescue dogs. On Thanksgiving night in 2014 and 2015, FOX presented “The All-Star Dog Rescue Celebration,” which resulted in thousands of adoption applications being submitted for the featured dogs. Unfortunately, the show hasn’t aired since 2015. Here’s hoping the Hallmark Channel keeps its “American Rescue Dog Show” around for many years to come.

Watch “2018 American Rescue Dog Show” on the Hallmark Channel Feb. 19 at 8 p.m. ET/PT.

Photo: Hallmark Channel/YouTube

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