Bulldog: health conditions to watch
The Bulldog is a devoted, easy-going dog whose distinctive build brings some predictable health needs — breathing, skin and joints chief among them. Early awareness makes all of them more manageable.
What to watch in a Bulldog
A predisposition is a “worth knowing”, not a diagnosis. Most Bulldogs never develop these — but knowing the early signs means you can act early.
Brachycephalic Airway Syndrome (BOAS)
Learn about Brachycephalic Airway Syndrome (BOAS) →The flat face and heavy build make breathing hard work and heat a real risk; learn the early warning signs.
Join the Breathing & Airways community →Skin & Ear Infections
Learn about Skin & Ear Infections →Deep facial and tail folds are prone to infection and need regular cleaning.
Join the Allergies & Skin community →Hip Dysplasia
Learn about Hip Dysplasia →The broad-set hips carry a higher chance of hip dysplasia, so watch for stiffness or a bunny-hopping gait when young.
Osteoarthritis
Learn about Osteoarthritis →That joint conformation also means arthritis can arrive earlier than in other breeds; keeping them lean helps enormously.
Join the Osteoarthritis community →Start here
Flat-Faced Dogs and Heatstroke: The Rules That Save Lives
For a flat-faced dog, heatstroke is not a hot-summer worry to file away for July. It is a fast, year-round killer, and the difference between a dog that recovers and a dog that doesn't is very often a few decisions an owner makes in the first few minutes, before any vet is involved. So here...
BOAS Surgery: Should We Operate, or Not?
Operate, or not. That is the question this piece is built around, and it's one of the harder ones in flat-faced medicine. Maybe your vet raised surgery after listening to your dog breathe, or maybe you've watched your Frenchie snore through the night and snuffle through every walk and gone looking yourself. Either way it's...
Flat-Faced Dog Breathing: Normal, or Dangerous?
You know the soundtrack already. The soft snore from the dog bed that everyone finds adorable. The little snort when they get excited at the door. The snuffle on a walk, the gulping and gurgling after a drink, the way they flop down propped against a cushion with their chin in the air. If you've...
Thinking of Getting a Flat-Faced Dog? An Honest Guide
There's a reason these dogs are everywhere. A French bulldog tilting its head at you, a pug leaning its whole weight into your shins, a bulldog snoring like a small engine on the sofa: they are funny, affectionate, devoted little companions, and the people who love them love them fiercely. So let me be clear...
Living With a Brachycephalic Dog: The Everyday Playbook
A good life for a flat-faced dog is built out of small, unglamorous, daily habits, and almost none of them cost anything. That is really the whole of this piece. There's no lecture coming about whether you should own the breed, because you already do and you already love the dog. So let's talk instead...
BOAS Surgery: What It Involves and the Week-by-Week Recovery
Your flat-faced dog is booked in, or has just come home with a shaved patch on a leg and a slightly bewildered look. The practical questions follow quickly. What did the surgeon actually do in there? How worried should you be in these first couple of days, and when will you hear that easier breathing...
Looking after a Bulldog
- Ask about a BOAS functional assessment
- Keep weight down to protect the joints
- Clean facial and tail folds regularly
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