By

Ryan Jaslow /

CBS News/ March 21, 2013, 2:18 PM

Common household items that can lead to a costly trip to the veterinarian

Joey, a 14-week-old chihuahua, attends a 2012 pet trade fair in Berlin.

/ Sean Gallup

Pet owners know nothing turns around a long day faster than the unbridled joy exhibited by your cat or dog the second you open that front door.

If you come home to find your labradoodle went to town on that chocolate bar you left out the previous night, that's another story.

Petplan pet insurance receives countless claims of animals eating something they shouldn't have and requiring an emergency trip to the veterinarian to get stomach flushes or worse, surgery.

Dr. Jules Benson, vice president of Veterinary Services at Petplan, recounted several cases in an interview with CBSNews.com, with tales ranging from pets needing emergency care from eating seemingly-harmless flowers to a beagle who ate drywall and needed surgery -- only for vets to find a sock was also in there.

Benson urges anyone who finds their pet has eaten something potentially dangerous on this list to call their veterinarian or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center at 1-888-426-5535. Make sure you know what food or substance they ate, how much of it, and when they took it, along with other information about your pet such as weight and age. All these factors could save your precious pal's life.

What better time to raise awareness for this issue than National Poison Prevention Week 2013, March 17 to 23? With Benson's assistance, we've compiled a list of common household items that pet owners should be wary of.

3 Comments Add a Comment
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crittermom1950 says:
These articles are fine but to just say "grapes are bad" is rather misleading because it doesn't tell you why. They can't metabolize them - WHY? What's in them that is bad for dogs? This article is VERY VAGUE! Not well written. Sorry.
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Aussiebobbie says:
this says garlic is bad, but other sources have said garlic is good and helps deter fleas and helps with bad breath. it recommends no fatty meat, how can any meat not have any fat, are home-made stews bad then? I bet he'd say yes to promote 'veterinarian-approved' products, he probably has his own line. How DO dogs survive in the wild without scientifically, veterinarian designed kibble? Surely, according to this, they don't.
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Aussie_convict says:
I have a foxy X russel and he loves weed, chocolate, fatty meats, pretty much all the things listed here in this article. He is now 15, he was the runt of the litter all his siblings have long died. Since 12 he gets a regular annual trip to the vet who keeps saying what great shape hes in for an old dog. I think this was a great article sponsored and brought to you by the Veterenarian council of America. At his age, he can eat whatever he wants.
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