Information from public internet sources. If your dog is in distress — start cooling and call your vet/ER while doing it.
Driving to the vet without cooling first is the #1 cause of heatstroke death. Only ~22% of owners cool their dog before vet arrival. Don't be the other 78%.
Time-Critical Thresholds
- 39.4°C / 103°F = STOP cooling (range varies between sources, 39.4-39.7°C / 103-103.5°F)
- 41°C / 105.8°F = heatstroke definition (CNS dysfunction begins)
- 43°C / 109°F = multiple organ failure, dramatically increased mortality
- Cooling within first 2 hours dramatically improves survival
- Less than half of dogs with severe HRI survive (RVC research)
- Only 21.7% of dogs cooled by owners before vet arrival — that statistic kills French Bulldogs
Immediate Actions in Order — Wet Then Vet Protocol
1. STOP ACTIVITY. Move to A/C or shade IMMEDIATELY
Carry the dog — do not let them walk.
Do NOT give human aspirin, ibuprofen, or any pain reliever to a heat-stroked dog — these can cause kidney failure on top of heatstroke. Cooling is the only home intervention.
2. COOL FIRST, TRANSPORT SECOND
This is THE single most important rule. RVC research: dogs cooled BEFORE arrival had significantly lower mortality.
3a. Cold-Water Immersion (preferred for healthy/conscious dogs)
- Bathtub, kiddie pool, lake, river, garden hose into bin
- COLD water is correct — old advice about "tepid only" is WRONG and being retracted by every major vet body
- Submerge body, keep head above water
- Hold there continuously
3b. Evaporative Cooling (for unconscious / elderly / seizing — works on any dog)
- Pour cold water over body continuously
- Re-wet every 60 seconds — dry fur insulates
- Run a fan or A/C at full blast — air movement is critical
- DO NOT cover with wet towels and leave them — they trap heat
4. STOP Cooling at ~39.4°C / 103°F Rectal
Measure with rectal thermometer every 5 min. Below this temp, dog will swing into hypothermia.
5. Transport with A/C on Full
+ wet towels UNDER the dog (so air can still circulate over them) + windows open if needed.
6. Call the Vet While Driving
Say: "incoming heatstroke, currently [temp], started cooling at [time]." They need to prep IV fluids, oxygen, monitoring.
Critical Mistakes That Kill
- "I'll just drive to the vet" — RVC data: most owners do this and the dog dies. The 30-minute drive with no cooling = brain death.
- Wet towels alone (covered) — they INSULATE body heat. Wet towels + fan = OK; wet towels in hot car = death.
- Ice water force-fed by mouth — vomit + brachycephalic = aspiration pneumonia. Do not put water in the mouth of a panting/distressed Frenchie.
- Stopping cooling too early — temp keeps rising for 5+ minutes after you stop because of metabolic heat
- Stopping cooling too late — going below 39°C causes shivering, vasoconstriction, secondary cardiac issues
- Using lukewarm water "to be safe" — slows cooling rate, dog stays in danger zone longer
- "Tepid water" myth — debunked. Cold is correct.
Cooling Methods Ranked by Speed
| Rank | Method | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cold water immersion (full-body submersion, head out) | Fastest |
| 2 | Continuous cold water pour + fan (evaporative + convective) | Second fastest, works on any dog including unconscious |
| 3 | Spraying with garden hose | Third |
| 4 | Ice packs on groin/neck/armpits | Adjunct only, NEVER primary cooling |
| 5 | Wet towels + fan | Only if rotating towels every 60 seconds |
Body Temperature Thresholds
| Temp (°C) | Temp (°F) | What's happening |
|---|---|---|
| 38.3-39.2 | 101-102.5 | Normal |
| 39.4-40 | 103-104 | Mild hyperthermia — cool down NOW |
| 40-41 | 104-105.8 | Heat exhaustion — emergency |
| 41+ | 105.8+ | Heatstroke — CNS dysfunction begins |
| 43+ | 109+ | Multi-organ failure |
Why Frenchies Are #1 Risk Breed
RVC research: Frenchies, English Bulldogs, Pugs, Pomeranians, Newfoundlands, Chow Chows, Staffies all show elevated risk.
Frenchies specifically:
- Cannot pant efficiently (panting = primary canine cooling mechanism)
- 50% have BOAS at baseline
- Excited/stressed Frenchie at 25°C (77°F) ambient = same heat stress as a Lab at 35°C
- A walk on a "warm" 22°C day can kill a Frenchie
Survival Depends on Cooling Speed
Multiple studies show: the faster owners start cooling and the lower the presenting temperature, the better the outcome. Specific peer-reviewed survival percentages vary widely between studies and populations.
What is consistent across all sources:
- Cooling within the first 30 minutes dramatically improves survival
- Presenting temp >43°C (109°F) carries the worst prognosis
- Owners who don't cool before transport have the worst outcomes
- Severe HRI overall: roughly half of dogs die even with vet care
Why "Wait and See" Kills
Heatstroke is exponential, not linear. Once core temp passes 41°C, the dog's body LOSES its own cooling ability.
Cellular damage cascades:
- DIC (disseminated intravascular coagulation)
- Kidney failure
- Gut bacterial translocation
- Brain edema
You cannot reverse this with vet IV fluids alone — cells are already dying. Owner cooling in the first 30 minutes is what saves the dog.
- "Lost my first Frenchie because I drove to the vet with A/C on but didn't WET him. Vet said had I poured cold water on him at home for 5 minutes he'd be alive. I now carry a 5L water bottle in my car every summer."
- "My second Frenchie collapsed on a 24°C walk. Hosed her in the garden for 10 minutes, then drove. ER vet said her temp was already down to 39.8 — she went home same day."
- "I have a kiddie pool in the yard May-October. Non-negotiable Frenchie equipment."
Prevention
- No walks above 22°C (72°F) — period
- Walk before 8am or after 8pm in summer
- Cooling vest, cooling mat, kiddie pool
- NEVER leave in car (interior reaches 40°C in 10 min at 22°C ambient)
- Recognize early signs: heavy panting that doesn't stop, thick rope drool, brick-red gums, stumbling, vomiting
📖 Sources & References
- RVC: Cool First, Transport Second. RVC.ac.uk
- Cooling Methods for HRI in Dogs. PMC10385239
- VetCompass Clinical Grading Tool. Nature.com
- Pathophysiology of Heatstroke in Dogs. PMC5800390
- Heatstroke.dog — Independent Veterinary Education. heatstroke.dog
- Wet Then Vet Protocol (Vet Help Direct). VetHelpDirect.com
- Heat Stroke in Dogs (VCA). VCAhospitals.com
⚠️ Disclaimer
This page is educational only. We are not veterinarians. Information from publicly available internet sources.
Nothing on this website replaces a veterinary consultation.- Never give your dog medication without veterinary approval.
- If your Frenchie shows heatstroke signs — start cooling AND drive to ER (call ahead).
- Even if dog seems "recovered" after cooling — go to ER anyway. Delayed organ failure can hit 12-48h later.