Question
I've been making pizza dough about an hour ago and a small piece dropped to the floor and my labrador of course ate it before I managed to clean it.
The entire batch weighed almost 700 grams (1.5 pounds) and contained less than a teaspoon of instant dry yeast.
It made sense to me this might be a problematic snack for a dog and indeed all Google results say this is extremely dangerous as the yeast don't die inside their stomach and just keep multiplying and bloating them up. But, it didn't mention whether quantities make a difference, and it seems like they should as I think there is live yeast on many foods and things in our environment and dogs or us don't get dangerously bloated all the time.
So if a medium-large dog ate perhaps less than 10 grams of dough which contained perhaps 0.01 to 0.02 grams of instant dry yeast, about 5.5 hours after their last meal (in regards to how empty their stomach might have been), is it likely to pose them danger or not? It is midnight here and I need to decide whether to be prepared to call an emergency vet; in the meantime my dog is sleeping.
Thank you.
Answer
In general, eating yeast or unbaked yeast dough is considered an emergency for dogs. See the Pet Poison Helpline for more information.
The reason for that is that usually a dog that gets access to some bread dough will gobble down a large amount of it (as much as is available or fits into their stomach). The big yeast ball in the stomach does continue to rise, which now puts pressure on the stomach walls. In result, the dog will try to vomit the excess volume, but the stickyness of the dough may prevent that. The dog is stuck with an ever increasing volume of dough in its stomach that it cannot get rid of.
The distention of the stomach walls can cut off blood flow and lead to tissue death. In addition, yeast produce ethanol (alcohol), which is also poisonous for dogs.
Since in your scenario the dog only ate a very small amount of dough, there is no risk of bloating and the amount of ethanol produced is also very small. I haven't found any reliable or scientific sources, but I find it unbelievable that yeast could survive stomach acid and continue to ferment the content of the intestine.
In the "eat all the dough" scenario the sticky mass of the dough protects the inner portions from the stomach acid, but the acid still digests the outer layer and all the yeast contained in it. If the ball of dough is very small, the acid will dissolve it completely and kill all the yeast in it.
Answered By - Elmy