Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Inhaling their owners’ second-hand smoke just as dangerous for pets

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THE devastatin­g effects of passive smoking in people is well documented, but, at Donaldson’s Vets, we are concerned that many animal owners may be inadverten­tly harming their beloved pets by lighting up when they are together in an enclosed space.

Legislatio­n is now in place banning smoking in cars if you are traveling with anyone under the age of 18.

There is more support than ever to quit. Most smokers understand that lighting up around children is harmful, but fewer people are aware of the impact passive smoking can have on their pets.

Sadly, this health impact, as in people, may be cancer and last week, I saw a dog where owners are often understand­ably distressed when they realise that their pet’s cancer may be the result of secondary tobacco smoking.

Currently, the legislatio­n doesn’t apply to animals but owners need to take the opportunit­y to protect their pet, either by quitting or by keeping their car and home smoke-free.

A recent study has clearly demonstrat­ed a correlatio­n between the levels of nicotine in a dog’s fur and its exposure to cigarette smoke in the home.

Many owners who smoke have never thought about the effects of their habit on their pets, but there is evidence that tobacco smoke increases the risks of lung and nasal cancers in dogs and of lymphoma in cats.

As a veterinary surgeon, I champion the prevention of illness and disease, and I would encourage owners to give up tobacco for the sake of their pet and to realise the consequenc­e of their smoking.

Dogs who are exposed to smoke within the household or in the car have been demonstrat­ed to be inhaling and probably ingesting cigarette smoke and all the noxious chemicals that are known to increase the incidence of cancer in your pet. Dogs in non-smoking households have been shown to have very low levels of nicotine incorporat­ed into their fur compared with animals owned by regular smokers. Pets owned by smokers who only smoke outside the house had intermedia­te levels of nicotine in their coat.

Veterinary medicine is advancing all the time. We now have the ability to treat some cancers in pets using surgery, chemothera­py and radiothera­py. Using CT, we are now able to detect tiny tumours within the lung of less than a millimetre in size. The quality of the in-house investigat­ion that we are able to perform to investigat­e and manage a problem improves every year and yet often in these cases, management provides no guarantees of long-term survival.

The best way of avoiding damage to your pet’s health is to not smoke around them – or better still give up.

It would be good for your own health, too.

 ??  ?? Giving up smoking is the safest way to protect yourself and your pets
Giving up smoking is the safest way to protect yourself and your pets
 ??  ?? Dogs can develop cancer from tobacco smoke
Dogs can develop cancer from tobacco smoke
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