Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Signs and blood changes in dogs after marijuana poisoning
By Binagia, Erin M et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2024·Michigan State University, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical examination findings and electrolyte abnormalities of dogs with marijuana/tetrahydrocannabinol toxicity: 223 cases (January 2017-July 2021).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 1-year-old dog was brought in after showing signs of ataxia (uncoordinated movement), hyperesthesia (increased sensitivity), and urinary incontinence following a visit to a public place. Many owners may not realize their pet has ingested marijuana, but this case highlights that young dogs can experience severe symptoms after exposure. The dog's vital signs were mostly normal, but some had elevated heart rates and mild electrolyte imbalances. Fortunately, all dogs in this study recovered fully with appropriate care, including hospitalization for those with more severe symptoms.
People also search for: dog ataxia after eating marijuana · signs of marijuana toxicity in dogs · treatment for dog hyperesthesia
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to describe the historical, physical, neurologic, and clinicopathologic findings in dogs with a definitive diagnosis of marijuana/tetrahydrocannabinol toxicity. ANIMALS: A total of 223 dogs with known ingestion of marijuana or a positive tetrahydrocannabinol result on human urine multidrug test. METHODS: Retrospective study from January 2017 to July 2021. RESULTS: Median age was 1 year (1 month to 12 years). A common history was becoming acutely neurologic after going outside or to a public place (62/223 [27.8%]). Most owners denied possibility of exposure (152/223 [68%]). Median vitals were normal, but hyperthermia (38/212 [22.6%]), tachycardia (82/222 [37%]), and systemic hypertension (37/61 [60.7%]) were common abnormalities. The most common clinical signs included ataxia (197/223 [88.3%]), hyperesthesia (168/223 [75.3%]), urinary incontinence (102/223 [45.7%]), lethargy (140/223 [62.5%]), and vomiting (58/223 [26%]). The most common combinations of neurologic signs included ataxia and hyperesthesia (157/223 [70.4%]) and ataxia, hyperesthesia, and urinary incontinence (81/223 [36.3%]). Mild hyperkalemia (39/76 [51.3%]) and mild hypercalcemia (53/67 [79.1%]) were common. Twenty-two dogs were hospitalized. Survival was 100%. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: A common presentation for marijuana toxicosis included young dogs with acute ataxia and hyperesthesia, with and without urinary incontinence, after going outside or to a public place. Vitals were often normal, but hyperthermia, tachycardia, and hypertension were common. Bloodwork was mostly normal, but mild hyperkalemia and mild ionized hypercalcemia were common. Marijuana should be high on the differential list with these history, physical examination, neurologic, and electrolyte abnormalities, regardless of owner denial or negative human urine multidrug test.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38608656/