Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog cooling after exercise: head dunking lowers body heat fast
By Parnes, Sara C et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2024·School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Voluntary head dunking after exercise-induced hyperthermia rapidly reduces core body temperature in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of working dogs showed signs of heat stress after exercising, with their body temperatures rising above normal. Researchers tested different cooling methods to see which worked best, and found that having the dogs voluntarily dunk their heads in cool water was the most effective way to quickly lower their body temperature. This method not only cooled them down faster but also prevented their temperatures from rising further after exercise. All dogs returned to their normal temperature after cooling, highlighting the importance of quick action to prevent heat-related injuries.
People also search for: dog heat stress symptoms · how to cool down a dog after exercise · head dunking for dogs heat exhaustion
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate field-applicable cooling methods for treatment of exercise-induced hyperthermia in dogs. METHODS: In this randomized, crossover study from June 27, 2023, to July 24, 2023, 12 working dogs exercised for 10 minutes until core body temperature reached 40.6 °C or above or ≥ 2 signs of heat stress were observed. Four different cooling protocols were evaluated: (1) neck chemical ice packs (2), (2) a wet (22 °C) neck towel, (3) wet (22 °C) axillae towels, or (4) voluntary head immersion ("dunking") into (22 °C) water. After intervention, dogs rested and were monitored for 40 minutes. RESULTS: The dunking protocol, which included limited water ingestion, produced the lowest mean core temperature in the initial 5 minutes after exercise, in the subsequent 35 minutes during which dogs cooled to baseline temperature and was the only protocol to prevent the initial postexercise temperature rise. All methods resulted in return to baseline temperature. CONCLUSIONS: Trained voluntary head dunk with limited water ingestion results in rapid cooling in field situations of exercise-induced hyperthermia in dogs with normal mental status and ability to pause panting. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: "Cool first, transport second" reduces morbidity and mortality of acute heat injury. When whole-body water immersion is not an option, the trained voluntary head dunk in mentally appropriate dogs prevents postexercise rise and rapidly reduces core body temperature within the first 5 minutes. Alternatively, allowing the dog to drink controlled amounts of cool water and pouring water on the dog's head may provide some benefit but warrants further study.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39293468/