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CriticalPrevalence: Very rare in this breed size

Bloat in Chow Chows

Bloat (gastric dilatation-volvulus) is rare in medium-sized breeds like Chow Chows but not impossible. Understanding the signs of this emergency — non-productive retching with a distended abdomen — can save any dog's life.

Prevalence

Very rare in this breed size

Typical Onset

Any age, but risk increases with age (peak 7-12 years)

Severity

Critical

Symptoms to Watch For

If your Chow Chow shows any of these signs, monitor closely and consult your veterinarian.

restlessness and inability to settle
distended, firm abdomen
non-productive retching — trying to vomit with nothing coming up
drooling and panting
rapid breathing and elevated heart rate
collapse and pale gums in advanced stage

Risk Factors

  • medium-sized body type
  • eating one large meal per day
  • rapid eating or gulping air while eating
  • vigorous exercise immediately after eating
  • first-degree relative with history of bloat
  • anxious temperament

Diagnosis

Emergency physical examination reveals distended, tympanic (drum-like) abdomen. Right lateral abdominal radiograph shows the "double bubble" sign confirming gastric dilatation-volvulus (GDV). Blood work reveals metabolic derangement, lactate level indicates tissue perfusion. ECG monitors for cardiac arrhythmias. Trocar decompression may be performed as emergency stabilization before imaging.

Treatment

EMERGENCY — minutes matter. Stabilization: IV fluid resuscitation, gastric decompression (trocar or orogastric tube), pain management. Surgery: exploratory laparotomy to derotate the stomach, assess tissue viability, splenectomy if splenic torsion present, gastropexy (permanently tacking the stomach to the body wall to prevent recurrence). Post-operative ICU monitoring for cardiac arrhythmias (common 24-72 hours post-surgery). Mortality rate 15-30% even with treatment.

Prevention

Prophylactic gastropexy at time of spay/neuter in high-risk breeds (reduces GDV risk by 95%). Feed 2-3 smaller meals rather than one large meal. Slow-feeder bowls. Avoid vigorous exercise 1 hour before and after eating. Avoid elevated food bowls (contrary to old advice). Stress reduction — anxious dogs have higher risk.

When to See a Vet

EXTREME EMERGENCY: Non-productive retching with a distended abdomen is bloat until proven otherwise. Do NOT wait — drive to the nearest emergency vet immediately. Without surgery, GDV is 100% fatal. Every minute of delay reduces survival probability.

Other Health Conditions in Chow Chows

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