My Dog Just Accidentally Ate Weed Cookies, Is She Gonna Be Ok?

CKat

Member
To all you non-believers, here's proof.....My 26lb. 6 year old (otherwise healthy) dog is currently in the vet dieing as we speak from eating 2 chocolate weed cookies. He even threw some of it up and it is still toxic enough to kill him. Within one hour he could not walk properly because his back legs were dragging, he urinated on himself, straight to the vet, and he developed hypothermia, very slow heart rate, extremely low blood pressure and deathly dehydration. Not to mention the shaking and seizures. He can't open his eyes even, or keep posture or balance, zero level of conciousness. The vet did everything they could for him and is monitoring him but he only seems to be getting worse not better. He is slipping in and out of breathing too. We can assure 100% he did not get into anything else as everything else was put away and puppy proof. He managed to open the only low cupboard, rip into my travel bag, dig through my clothes and find them. Thank god he ate only 2 not all 4. Now it is in god's hands only if he lives.
Marijuana and Chocolate CAN kill an animal. Don't be a fool and think otherwise, remember my dog.
 

hereshegrows

Well-Known Member
I know of a kid who found his parents full try of brownies. He gave his little sister one and ate the rest himself. (he was always a pig like that.) His parents found the pair a few hours later rolling around on the ground laughing at the playground. They were fine...it was the 70's so, it all worked out.
 

hereshegrows

Well-Known Member
To all you non-believers, here's proof.....My 26lb. 6 year old (otherwise healthy) dog is currently in the vet dieing as we speak from eating 2 chocolate weed cookies. He even threw some of it up and it is still toxic enough to kill him. Within one hour he could not walk properly because his back legs were dragging, he urinated on himself, straight to the vet, and he developed hypothermia, very slow heart rate, extremely low blood pressure and deathly dehydration. Not to mention the shaking and seizures. He can't open his eyes even, or keep posture or balance, zero level of conciousness. The vet did everything they could for him and is monitoring him but he only seems to be getting worse not better. He is slipping in and out of breathing too. We can assure 100% he did not get into anything else as everything else was put away and puppy proof. He managed to open the only low cupboard, rip into my travel bag, dig through my clothes and find them. Thank god he ate only 2 not all 4. Now it is in god's hands only if he lives.
Marijuana and Chocolate CAN kill an animal. Don't be a fool and think otherwise, remember my dog.
:( that sucks! I hope your dog pulls though. I'm sending good vibes your way.
 

gioua

Well-Known Member
To all you non-believers, here's proof.....My 26lb. 6 year old (otherwise healthy) dog is currently in the vet dieing as we speak from eating 2 chocolate weed cookies. He even threw some of it up and it is still toxic enough to kill him. Within one hour he could not walk properly because his back legs were dragging, he urinated on himself, straight to the vet, and he developed hypothermia, very slow heart rate, extremely low blood pressure and deathly dehydration. Not to mention the shaking and seizures. He can't open his eyes even, or keep posture or balance, zero level of conciousness. The vet did everything they could for him and is monitoring him but he only seems to be getting worse not better. He is slipping in and out of breathing too. We can assure 100% he did not get into anything else as everything else was put away and puppy proof. He managed to open the only low cupboard, rip into my travel bag, dig through my clothes and find them. Thank god he ate only 2 not all 4. Now it is in god's hands only if he lives.
Marijuana and Chocolate CAN kill an animal. Don't be a fool and think otherwise, remember my dog.

reg date= 1-1-13 post count =1

Attitude = I told you so... =Hmmmm...

Chocolate = bad for dogs
Pot= If it's a clean product and has no pesticides or laced with anything... may not be 100% great for your dogs.. but wont kill them...


Hope your dog is ok... regardless of what happened to the dog...
 

fluffygrrrl

Well-Known Member
I found this thread doing a google search because my maltese ate 1/4 of a loaf pan of brownies I made last night. I was reassured until I saw ckat post. I wonder if the dog made it? I am worried because he can't walk and just falls over and pants with his tongue hanging out. It has been 12 hours now. It is Sunday and there isn't a Vet open until noon, because now I'm worried it may be the chocolate that kills him. He won't drink any water. I am beside myself with guilt for leaving them in the car.
 

Red1966

Well-Known Member
If they were chocolate, the dog may be poisoned. If not, the heat may have gotten to him/her. Try finding an emergency veterinary service that's open. I wish you luck.
 

qwizoking

Well-Known Member
I didn't read any of these posts.... but even the smallest of crumbs can intoxicate your dog... it will fall over or off things, uncontrollably dribble...it can look very serious but almost guaranteed that it will be OK.. I've had some very scary instances with a tiny jack Russel terrier, ate like 2 brownies...a vet will instantly recognize the. Intoxication most notably by the dribbling.....keep an eye, wrap him in a blanky and love on him...he'll be alright

Enormous dose levels (over 3000 mg/kg of Delta 9 THC) were administered without lethality to most animals. A dose of about 1000 mg/kg THC was the lowest dose which caused death in any animals The completeness of intestinal absorption of THC at these high doses is unknown.(meaning death probly occurred simply from the high concentration or the precipitation in blood) Behavioral changes in the survivors included sedation, huddled posture, muscle tremors, hypersensitivity to sound and hypermobility.

The cause of death in the rats and mice subsequent to oral THC was profound central nervous system depression leading to dyspnea, prostration, weight loss, loss of Fighting reflex, ataxia, and severe fall in body temperature which led to cessation of respiration from 10 to 46 hours after single dose oral administration. No consistent pathological changes were observed in any organs. The cause of death when it rarely occurred in the higher species did not appear to be related to the same mechanism as in the rats.

Using intravenous administration, the acute one dose LD50 for Delta 9 THC was 100 mg/kg in dogs...an oral dose was not found...and death was probably caused by thc falling out of solution in the blood basically clogging lungs...death occurred in those within minutes
 

Twitch

Well-Known Member
hope they were cheep brownies and didnt have real coco in them because thats what is bad for them is the actual coco, no idea why i am sure some one does
 

qwizoking

Well-Known Member
baker's chocolate of approximately(highest cocoa content) 1.3 g/kg (0.02 oz/lb) of a dog's body weight is sufficient to cause symptoms of toxicity. For example, 2.25-ounce (64 g) of baker's chocolate would be enough to produce symptoms in a 20-pound (9.1 kg) dog

Most recipes whether boxed or homemade, or cocoa powder or chocolate use 1 cup or less, 3/4 most common... 1 cup weighs between 90-130 grams


Taking all of this into consideration with the thc ld-50 its not serious however you should comfort your dog especially small ones and keep them in a warm blanky
 

clint308

Well-Known Member
I have a little Jackrussell and i made some cookies up
we all passed out whatching tv and when we woke up relised there was a cookie missing from the table
I checked my little girl out and she didnt move for around 3hours , her nose was running and she could not stop dribbling out her mouth
We just gave her a blanket wrapped her up and gave her some love
after around 4 hours she started walking around again and was ok
I felt so bad for her , I felt like it was animal cruelty or something
After that i had 1 cookie left and thought i would see what she did , so i let her smell it
She ran from it and would not go near it , i guess she remembered what it did to her
She is 100% fine
 

ilikecheetoes

Well-Known Member
in the US dogs rarely die of chocolate poisoning. We dont have enough real chocolate in anything. Its all fake flavoring. My 10 pound jack russell ate an entire bag of hersheys kisses. Even left the foil wrappers neatly pile up on the floor. Theyd have to eat real bakers chocolate or something to kill them.

Also grapes can be poison to dogs. Didnt know that until a few weeks ago and ive been giving my dog grapes for years. I've been passing that on when ever I can now.
 

AlGore

Well-Known Member
My dog ate roaches out of a weed ash tray a few times and got pretty sick from it. We actually didn't figure out what it was until the 2nd time. He got very wobbly and "bobble headed", would drool uncontrollable, not eat or drink, and even vomit.

The experience has made me very cautious with my stuff.
 

fluffygrrrl

Well-Known Member
Glad to report my doggie is fine and back to his normal self. After reading your posts and a few more on the internet, I was quite certain that he wouldn't die from the chocolate, I did use a box mix. When he started wanting to throw up, I put him on the floor so he wouldn't puke on the couch with me. he just dry heaved and then he just fell over, so I went and layed down with him. My other dog and even the cat came over and layed with him, they knew he was sick, too. So sweet. By 2 pm on Sunday he was walking around better and by 3 pm running, so I'd say it took about 18 hours to get out of his system. I really appreciate all of your posts, thanks y'all
 

GreyLord

Active Member
I came home one day & found my beautiful then 12yo 50kg Rotty lying prone inside the front door. I thought he was dead, I dropped what I was carrying & threw myself next to him & cradled him, sobbing like a little girl. But he was warm. Further examination revealed that he was breathing slowly but deeply. Wiping my tears away I tried to wake him thinking he was ill. He slowly half opened his eyes, gave me a look of affection & dropped back off to sleep.
This was the best behaved dog ever. Shit, I was naughtier than this dog. But. There's a but. He could not resist anything with butter in it [easiest way to give most dogs a pill or tablet is to encase it in a cold ball of butter. Dogs tend to swallow it, not chew.] That day I had left for work & forgotten to put a bag of rubbish out that included about a dozen stale cookies I'd misplaced. The dog had eaten the lot. He was so bombed. Lucky I didn't own a chihuahua. He awoke every 8hours or so & run to the back door to go outside for a slash, slurp down half a bowl of water & sleep for another 8hours to repeat the process. He was back to normal about 30 hours later.
 
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