Dogs with mild disease never develop any problems and may live a normal lifespan.
However,
dogs with mild disease can produce severely affected offspring.
Not exact matches
Some
dogs less than 1 year of age
with mild generalized
disease may spontaneously recover.
In comparison,
dogs with mild infections may show little or no signs of illness and the
disease may go undetected.
Two clinical syndromes have been seen in
dogs infected
with the canine influenza virus — a
mild form of the
disease and a more severe form that is accompanied by pneumonia.
Although the presence of severe degenerative joint
disease in remaining limbs may be a contraindication, amputation can still be successful in
dogs with a
mild to moderate degree of degenerative change in remaining limbs.
A small number of
dogs that had close contact
with the affected
dogs also have
mild respiratory
disease, but test results from those animals are not yet available.
While normally associated
with mild disease and low mortality rates, respiratory
disease nevertheless poses significant challenges to the management of
dogs in the highly stressful environment of animal shelters.
Dogs affected
with this
disease may have symptoms varying from very
mild to severe bleeding.
Dr. Stephanie Janeczko, Senior Director of the ASPCA's Shelter Medical Programs, notes that when dealing
with infectious respiratory
disease in
dogs, it's also important to remember that the same pathogen can have a
mild presentation in one animal, yet cause severe or even fatal
disease in another.
Six of the affected
dogs began
with mild generalized seizures that progressed to grand mal seizures over the course of their
disease.
In
dogs with mild infection and no clinical signs of heartworm
disease, it is safest to perform spay - neuter surgery prior to beginning adulticidal therapy.
For
dogs with asymptomatic,
mild, or moderate
disease, melarsomine dihydrochloride is also labeled for two treatments given 24 hours apart.
This
dog, when first examined at 10 years of age, had retinal lesions that were regarded as incompatible
with a diagnosis of crd3, but in retrospect were likely to represent an unusually delayed and
mild form of crd3
disease.
A usually
mild disease, coronavirus is spread when a
dog comes in contact
with the stool or other excretions of infected
dogs.
Carrier
dogs can have
mild features of the
disease but when bred
with another carrier of the same Mutation, there is a risk of having severely affected pups.
Then, there were
dogs that tested
Mild for the
disease that were bred to
dogs that tested Good, and they produced puppies
with PennHIP readings of 3.1,
with no HD.
Though serious side effects are not expected, and liver problems are likely to be
mild,
dogs with existing liver
disease may experience more issues during over-use of the given medicine.
While the vaccine is a modified live virus and thus your
dog may come down
with a
mild form of the
disease (approximately 10 % of the time) it will not be spread to other
dogs.
Most
dogs diagnosed
with canine influenza experience a
mild form of the
disease.»
Most
dogs with kennel cough show a classic course of
mild disease characterized by one or more of the following signs:
Young
dogs with mild changes should still be considered surgical candidates to minimize progression of the
disease as the
dog ages.
Dogs infected
with heartworms may at first exhibit very
mild and intermittent symptoms of the
disease.
Based on our observations gathered during ophthalmic examination of affected
dogs, we propose three clinical stages of
disease ranging from diffuse multifocal red / brown discoloration of the tapetal fundus without associated visual deficits (Stage 1), to geographic retinal thinning / degeneration
with mild to moderate signs of night - blindness (Stage 2), to more diffuse retinal thinning / degeneration affecting most of the tapetal fundus and associated
with night - vision loss and severely impaired day - vision (Stage 3).