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Anxiety Disorder in Dogs

PetCalm - Homeopathic remedy soothes stressful situations or everyday disturbances

Unsuitable and destructive conduct from your dog can get highly annoying for the dog owner. It is particularly unsettling if you have established that he is trained properly from being a puppy. When you are certain that your dog has been properly trained, bad conduct does become difficult to deal with.

Even so, it is crucial to realise that there are numerous reasons why your dog can lapse into untrained, destructive or extremely submissive behavior even after years of training. It is usual for well-trained dogs to run amok now and again for no evident reason.

One of the reasons why they can forget all that they have learned is anxiety disorder in dogs. Although dogs are intelligent animals, they are not able to manage stress and anxiety that they may experience due to assorted reasons.

Anxiety disorder in dogs brings out the worst in them. There can be many reasons for anxiety but the most common one is separation anxiety in dogs. Dogs are known to destroy furniture, urinate in the home, break objects and indulge in unreasonable barking when their owners go out and leave them alone. Such destructive behavior shouldn't be interpreted as revenge because dogs are incapable of that emotion. It is simply an expression of utmost displeasure at being left behind alone. As dogs are pack animals and have an inborn distaste of isolation, they feel anxious at being left alone and wonder if the owner will return.

Anxiety disorder in dogs can be stimulated by other situations, too. Some dogs respond unpleasantly when there are too many people around. They are not used to crowds and react badly. The response that such situations induce can alter from dog to dog. Some may become aggressive and others may run away from the scene. For some dogs, visitors at home can set off undesirable behavior.

Loud noises can stimulate anxiety. It can begin as fear from a specific kind of a loud noise, like a thunderstorm. If not redressed, this anxiety toward loud noises can broaden to other noises like gunshots, engine noise or any similar loud bang. The most common response to noise associated anxiety is to cower or shudder. Many dogs take shelter under a bed or a sofa. Some aggressive dogs react with extravagant barking, as if they were trying to out-shout the loud noise.

If your dog connects a trip to the veterinarian with a car ride, he will probably get anxious even if you try and take him to the park. Fear and anxiety about any trip can happen if the connection is strong and if his trips to the vet have almost always been unpleasant.

Anxiety disorder in dogs is a direct consequence of some sort of stress that your pet experiences. It's necessary to understand the cause behind the anxious behavior and address the particular object or situation that is inducing stress. Alleviating stress in dogs demands patient and consistent training. You need to use the process of desensitizing to be able to alleviate your dog of the stress.

Valuable tips for addressing anxiety disorder in dogs:

* Separation Anxiety - Use trust building measures to communicate to your dog that you will come back whenever you leave him.

* Car Trips - Entice your dog into the car instead of forcing him in. Patience and reinforcements will help.

* Social Anxiety - Step-up exposure to humans bit by bit.

* Noise Anxiety - Keen observation is fundamental for addressing this anxiety disorder. Anticipate and be ready with dog treats and try to connect noise with rewards.

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The Information published on this site is not intended to replace the advice and treatment of a qualified veterinarian. It is for educational purposes only.
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