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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Grassy hitchhikers can rob your pet of good health

Marty Becker Knight RidderTribune

Whenever your pet goes out in the summertime, it might come back with unwanted hitchhikers. These can be ticks, burrs or grass seeds.

Of the three, the seed of certain grasses (sometimes called grass awns, foxtails or cheat grass), seem the most innocuous. But they can do some real damage to your pet.

Seeds that hitchhike on animals represent an elegant form of co-evolution. Plants don’t have mobility, so they evolved clever ways to use ours.

Burrs (the inspiration for Velcro) have numerous hooked needles that get caught up in hair, where they hang on. They can cause hair to mat and irritate the skin beneath.

What seems like a diabolical plot to use animals as unwitting transporters is simply a whim of natural selection. Or as Shakespeare put it, “the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.”

Now of course, Shakespeare wasn’t talking about evolution, but slings and arrows does seem an apt description of the grass awn.

Although there is no intent in a seed of grass, the grass awn is still totally diabolical in my book. The grass awn is torpedo shaped and covered with little barbs.

The barbs all angle back, away from the pointy tips. Once the seeds get snagged in fur, they can move only one way: deeper into the fur.

And they don’t stop when they reach the skin. If lodged between the toes or in the ear canal, they can continue to burrow in. Sometimes it is the little, seemingly harmless things that can surprise you.

“No, ‘tis not so deep as a well nor so wide as a church door; but ‘tis enough, ‘twill serve” Mercutio says in “Romeo and Juliet” of the sword thrust that kills him. So too, the lowly grass awn can pack a powerful punch as it opens a one-way path of destruction, bringing bacteria in its wake.

Grass awns can cause ear infections, punctured ear drums, swollen, infected feet when they go between toes, internal infections and abscesses and even spinal cord injuries. Even if you manage to keep the worst grass species out of your yard, they still may be found in other outdoor spaces your dog or cat visits.

Being weeds, they have a high probability of growing where we don’t want them. The only protection is vigilance and prompt attention.

If you frequently run your hands or a grooming tool over your pet and remove them before they dig in, you can prevent a lot of the difficulties.

When you come in from outdoors in the summer, get in the habit of running your hands over your entire pet, paying special attention to places a grass awn might lodge, such as between your pet’s toes (on the top and bottom of the paws) and near the ear opening. For dogs with a lot of hair between the toes, it is very helpful to keep the paw hairs trimmed short during grass seed season.

If grass awns escape your notice and manage to dig in, your pet will need a trip to your veterinarian for the awns’ removal. The tough seed coats make it difficult for the body’s defensive mechanisms to break down the seeds.

Your veterinarian may need to anesthetize your pet to remove the awns and likely will place your pet on antibiotics.

“The most common sign of a problem is a sudden onset of sneezing, sometimes with blood in it, after a dog has sniffed a foxtail into its nose,” said Dr. Franklin McMillan of Los Angeles, a board-certified specialist in veterinary internal medicine and author of “Unlocking the Animal Mind.” “Another common sign is a dog licking at its paw to relieve the discomfort of a foxtail-induced infection. Head shaking and pawing at an ear is a tip-off for a foxtail in the ear.”

“I have practiced in all four corners of the U.S.,” says Dr. J. Veronika Kiklevich, D.V.M., a practitioner in San Antonio, “and I have found grass awns to be a problem everywhere! They are often undetected until they are causing a pet an enormous problem due to inflammation or an abscess, when they can be extremely difficult to find.

“I had a patient once,” Kiklevich continues, “who over the course of about six months presented with sneezing, neck pain, pneumonia and finally peritonitis (which, unfortunately, he did not survive).

“On necropsy, we were able to trace the tract of a migrating grass awn from the nose through the neck to the chest and then to the abdomen. That was a hearty (and deadly) little hitchhiker!!!”

“Grass awns are extremely frustrating because once they get in, they are so hard to find” says Raelynn Farnsworth, community practice veterinarian at the Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine. “It is much better to prevent a problem by finding them early.”

This is one hitchhiker you really don’t want your pet to pick up and bring home.