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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog vomiting and tremors after eating polyacrylic acid hydrogel pad

By Dorman, David C et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2018·College of Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Toxicity associated with ingestion of a polyacrylic acid hydrogel dog pad.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An adult male Australian Shepherd mix became ill after ingesting a dog pad made from a superabsorbent hydrogel. Within 24 hours, the dog showed signs of confusion, difficulty walking, vomiting, and tremors. This raised concerns about the safety of these products, which are generally considered non-toxic. Although the dog experienced severe symptoms, the study suggests that high doses of this hydrogel can lead to neurotoxicity in pets. It's important for pet owners to keep these products out of reach to prevent accidental ingestion.

People also search for: dog pad ingestion symptoms · Australian Shepherd vomiting treatment · what to do if my dog ate a dog pad

Abstract

Superabsorbent sodium polyacrylate polymeric hydrogels that retain large amounts of liquids are used in disposable diapers, sanitary napkins, and other applications. These polymers are generally considered "nontoxic" with acute oral median lethal doses (LD) >5 g/kg. Despite this favorable toxicity profile, we identified a novel toxic syndrome in dogs and rats following the ingestion of a commercial dog pad composed primarily of a polyacrylic acid hydrogel. Inappropriate mentation, cerebellar ataxia, vomiting, and intention tremors were observed within 24 h after the ingestion of up to 15.7 g/kg of the hydrogel by an adult, castrated male Australian Shepherd mix. These observations prompted an experimental study in rats to further characterize the toxicity of the hydrogel. Adult, female Sprague Dawley rats ( n = 9) were assessed before and after hydrogel ingestion (2.6-19.2 g/kg over 4 h) using a functional observation battery and spontaneous motor activity. Clinical signs consistent with neurotoxicity emerged in rats as early as 2 h after the end of hydrogel exposure, including decreased activity in an open field, hunched posture, gait changes, reduced reaction to handling, decreased muscle tone, and abnormal surface righting. Hydrogel-exposed rats also had reduced motor activity when compared with pre-exposure baseline data. Rats that ingested the hydrogel did not develop nervous system lesions. These findings support the conclusion that some pet pad hydrogel products can induce acute neurotoxicity in animals under high-dose exposure conditions.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29888679/