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Why "Ace" may not be the right medication for your dog's fear of fireworks

ruthcatrin

Well-Known Member
The first article quotes the 2nd, the 2nd is looking at storm phobias, but the same applies to fireworks phobias, or even vet office phobias!

Dons fireworks fear worse | Dr. Marty Becker

http://veterinarynews.dvm360.com/dvm/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=136493&pageID=1&sk=&date=

I know that the common "treatment" for storm and noise phobias and veterinary office visits is acepromazine. In truth, I wish this medication would be placed at the far back of a top shelf and used only exceptionally. Acepromazine is a dissociative anesthetic meaning that it scrambles perceptions. Ask yourself if a scrambling of perceptions will make an anxious or uncertain dog worse or better. It's always worse, and we make many if not most dogs more sensitive to storms by using this drug. In part this is also because sensitivity to noise is heightened.




This is a recipe for disaster for these dogs, and, in fact, they learn to be more fearful and more reactive because of these associations. If what you need is sedation - acepromazine can be an acceptable adjuvant, but it makes most of my really fearful and really reactive patients worse, so all sorts of other drug combos can work better and do less harm than is done by the routine use of acepromazine.
 

Ehl

Well-Known Member
My labs are like meh storm /fireworks, Duke crawls under the desk and hides. Daisy chases the noise ( planes, helicopters, motorcycles) so she will be the one to watch. I have never drugged a dog but if they are /were that fearful I think crating them in their safe spot would be best until it's over. Sadly living in a state that allows lots of noisy ones to be sold mean we have been having them on and off for about 2 weeks so far and will have them for weeks after for backyard "occasions".