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Your pet’s microchip can scan perfectly and still leave us with no way to reach you. That gap shows up in the worst moments: a dog bolts after fireworks, a gate fails during a storm, or a cat slips out during a busy door-opening night and gets hurt. We’re Julie Schwenzer and Dr. Mike LoSasso from Frisco Emergency Pet Care, and we walk through what actually happens at an emergency vet hospital when a good Samaritan brings in a found pet.
We explain why microchips aren’t a magic GPS, why the chip is basically just a number, and why clinics have to call the microchip company to contact the registered owner. We also cover the real-world headaches: chips registered to a shelter instead of the current family, outdated phone numbers, pets with multiple chips after rehoming, and what it means when a microchip company shuts down. Along the way, we share an easy habit to protect your pet: pick a yearly reminder, like July 4th, and verify your microchip registration details before the next emergency.
Cats get a special spotlight, because “my cat never leaves the house” is the myth we hear right before an indoor cat becomes a mystery stray. We also cover where microchips are typically placed between the shoulder blades, how chips can migrate, and why a full-body scan matters. If you want practical, ER-tested advice on pet microchipping, microchip registration, and lost pet recovery in North Dallas, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a fellow pet owner, and leave a review so more families can find this guidance when every second counts.
To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit:
https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com
Frisco Emergency Pet Care
11201 Preston Road
Frisco, Texas 75033
469-287-6767
By Dr. Mike LoSassoYour pet’s microchip can scan perfectly and still leave us with no way to reach you. That gap shows up in the worst moments: a dog bolts after fireworks, a gate fails during a storm, or a cat slips out during a busy door-opening night and gets hurt. We’re Julie Schwenzer and Dr. Mike LoSasso from Frisco Emergency Pet Care, and we walk through what actually happens at an emergency vet hospital when a good Samaritan brings in a found pet.
We explain why microchips aren’t a magic GPS, why the chip is basically just a number, and why clinics have to call the microchip company to contact the registered owner. We also cover the real-world headaches: chips registered to a shelter instead of the current family, outdated phone numbers, pets with multiple chips after rehoming, and what it means when a microchip company shuts down. Along the way, we share an easy habit to protect your pet: pick a yearly reminder, like July 4th, and verify your microchip registration details before the next emergency.
Cats get a special spotlight, because “my cat never leaves the house” is the myth we hear right before an indoor cat becomes a mystery stray. We also cover where microchips are typically placed between the shoulder blades, how chips can migrate, and why a full-body scan matters. If you want practical, ER-tested advice on pet microchipping, microchip registration, and lost pet recovery in North Dallas, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a fellow pet owner, and leave a review so more families can find this guidance when every second counts.
To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit:
https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com
Frisco Emergency Pet Care
11201 Preston Road
Frisco, Texas 75033
469-287-6767