We’d already tried medication, fluids, even waiting to see if the obstruction would pass on its own. But as the dog grew weaker and its vomiting worsened, surgery became the only option. The moment we opened the stomach, that misshapen, greenish lump slid into view, coated in slime and tangled with fur. Everyone froze, trying to make sense of it. It looked nothing like a toy, nothing like anything that belonged in a body.
Only after rinsing, turning it over, and studying the warped openings did the truth click: it was a soft rubber piece of a KONG-style toy, swollen and distorted by acid. The dog had likely chewed it apart weeks earlier. We removed every fragment, flushed the stomach, and closed up. Within days, the same dog that had come in exhausted and miserable was wagging its tail again — a living reminder that even “safe” toys can turn dangerous when swallowed.
