With cannabis edibles on shelves, vets remind owners to be smart about pets and pot - Action News
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Manitoba

With cannabis edibles on shelves, vets remind owners to be smart about pets and pot

If you're one of the many Manitobanspicking up edibles in recent months, veterinarians want to remind you to keep your cannabis far from your pets.

Though most cannabis exposures are accidental, 'often these pets will need supportive care,' vet says

Cannabis edibles that include ingredients toxic to dogs, like chocolate, present more of a risk due to the combination of toxic factors, said Dr. Ian Sandler, a board member on the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association's national issues committe. (Lizardflms/Shutterstock)

If you're one of the many Manitobanspicking up edibles in recent months, veterinarians want to remind you to keep your cannabis far from your pets.

Dr. Ian Sandler, CEO of Grey Wolf Animal Health in Toronto, said while it's never good to let pets get intoproducts with a high THC content, edibles can pose more of a risk thanks to the potential combination of cannabis toxicity and other toxic ingredients.

"The problem with many of these high THC products is not so much the THC,per se," saidSandler,who is also a board member on thenational issues committee of the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association.

"The biggest issue is oftentimes these components contain things like chocolate, especially dark chocolate, and sweeteners like xylitol, possibly raisins or macadamia nuts. And those products, in [and of] themselves, are fairly toxic to dogs, especially. So it's really a combination issue."

Cannabis edibles should be kept away from pets as a combination of ingredients including chocolate can be risky for furry friends to consume. (Tijana Martin/Canadian Press)

Sandler said reports of pet exposure to cannabis and cannabidiol have increased in recent years. Over the past six years, the U.S.-based Pet Poison Helpline says cannabis toxicity cases have more than quadrupled in the U.S.

In Canada, the helpline reported there were 54 reports of pet exposure to CBD and cannabis during the first seven months of 2019. There were 64 reports from Canada in all of 2018, the organization said.

Dr. Karen Choptain, an emergency vet at Winnipeg's BridgwaterVeterinary Hospital, said thatanecdotally, she's observed a jump in the number of pets coming in for cannabis exposure since the drug was legalized for recreational use in October 2018.

"This is a product that's becoming more readily available to our pets," she said.

"If you're going to have the product in your house you just have to be cognizant of that make sure that you're keeping your products in a pet safe container, out of a pet'sreach, that kind of thing, and notice symptoms, so that if you do see them you can seek veterinary attention right away."

What happens when a pet consumes cannabis?

Sandler said so far, evidence indicates CBD or cannabidiol,a non-intoxicating compound found in the cannabis plant, is safe for dogs and cats although more research is still needed, and veterinarians have no regulated way to prescribe its use.

But cannabis products that contain a high amount of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THCthe main psychoactive component in cannabis that gives users a high does have an effect on pets, and symptoms tend to last between six and 12 hours, or up to 24.

There have been no reported pet deaths from cannabis exposure, Sandler said.

Symptoms of cannabis exposure come on a "sliding scale," Choptain said. Typical examples include ataxia, or an unco-ordination of movement, as well as heavy drooling, dilated eyes, staring off into space and leaking of urine.

There's also evidence to indicate dogs can be more sensitive to the psychogenic effects of THC than their owners, she said. Dogs have more THC receptors than humans do, including in the skin in their salivary glands which might explain why they drool so much, she said.

Veterinarians suspect dogs feel paranoid after ingesting cannabis, Choptain said, based on how hypersensitive some dogs appear afterward.

"They're scared, they don't understand what's going on, they react to movements," she said. "We think that it actually has more of a negative effect on dogs than a benefit effect that it does to people."

What should I do if my pet is exposed?

Pet owners should watch out for accidental exposures, such as pets eating butted-out joints discarded on the ground, Choptain says. (CBC News)

The vast majority of pet exposures to cannabis Choptain has seen were accidental, she said. That could range from pets getting into their owner's stash to snapping up butted-out joints off the ground while out for a walk.

Sandler added pets, especially dogs, have been known to preferentially eat cannabis even if it's not in the form of an edible.

"We're not sure if it's the aromatics, or some of the floral fragrances from the terpenes which are essentially the essential oils within the cannabis plantbut we've certainly seen dogs eat dried bud," he said. Cats will sometimes eat oilstoo, he added.

If you suspect your pet has gotten into some cannabis, Choptain said the right thing to do is to take them to the vet.

"Often these pets will need supportive care," she said."We also do decontamination therapy, so if we can, we make them vomit. If not, we'll get them activated charcoal, which helps to bind to any recirculating toxins within their system, and we put them on intravenous fluids to help flush their system and provide support."

What's next?

While scientists work to better understand how cannabis affects humans, Sandler said he thinks the veterinary world is ahead of the curve.

But Sandler says despite appetite from pet owners for CBD or other cannabis products to treat their pet's ailments, there's still no legal framework for veterinarians to guide them in doing so.

"What is very, very sad and very, very scary isbecause there isn't a legal pathway for veterinarians to be able to authorize, pet parents are sort of taking it in their own hands to do what they think is best," he said.

He wants to see Health Canada give veterinarians more guidance on cannabis products and pets, andhe hopes Canadian veterinarians become more involved in the conversation.

"We are essentially the health care advocates, and we are the key point person who can prescribe products for animals," he said. "And we need to beengaged with that."