Life on Four Paws

‘My vet killed Biscuit during a “routine” dental cleaning. I now have another little dog, and I will NEVER sign that anaesthesia consent form again.’

Author: Martha Giussy

Reviewed by Ms. Eleanor Whitmore (Canine veterinary Istitute)

Note: I'm not writing this to get sympathy. I'm writing it because if you too are about to sign the form for your dog's scale and polish, you could be the next person who doesn't see her dog wake up. And I can't let that happen again.

The Truth No Small-Dog Owner Wants To Hear

I never thought I'd write this, but if I don't, who will?
 

My name's Helen, I'm 45, I live in Sheffield, and I killed my Biscuit without knowing it.
 

Biscuit was a Yorkshire terrier — two and a half kilos of love, eyes as black as two olives, a little pink tongue that licked my nose every morning. 

For ten years she was my shadow.
 

Then, one Thursday in February, my vet said: "She's got too much tartar, she needs a scale and polish — it's routine."
 

£58 of blood tests. £220 for the descaling. Thirty minutes on the operating table.

At 4:12 in the morning the phone rang.
 

"Mrs Carter… I'm so sorry. Biscuit didn't make it."
 

I sat down on the kitchen floor, in the dark, phone still in my hand. 

 

I wasn't crying. 

I couldn't. 

My brain wouldn't accept it.

 

Biscuit's little heart had stopped after 27 minutes of anaesthetic. 

 

They tried to resuscitate her for 20 minutes. Nothing.

 

"It's normal, madam, there's always a risk,"

the vet told me the next day, with that professional air of someone who's delivered this news a thousand times. 

 

"You signed the form."

I had signed the form. The way everyone does.

 

Six months later I adopted Olivia from the rescue shelter in Barnsley — a nine-year-old Maltese with a note tied to her lead: "We can't keep her any more — she has a heart murmur and can't have the descaling done."

 

Olivia's mouth was a disaster. Black tartar on every tooth, inflamed gums, breath that doubled you over.

 

I went back to my vet.

 

"Mrs Carter, she needs the descaling."

I looked at him. I said nothing for a whole minute. Then I told him: 

 

"Doctor, I'm not signing that form again. NEVER again."

And then that evening I found something out that gave me chills.

The Silent Epidemic No Vet Tells You About

I started searching at night, after midnight, while Olivia slept on the sofa.

 

And I found numbers that froze my blood.

721 dogs in every 10,000 die from anaesthetic complications

 

Sounds like a little? It's thousands of dogs a year that don't wake up from a routine procedure.

 

For small dogs over the age of seven — Yorkshires, Maltese, Chihuahuas, Pinschers, Shih Tzus — the anaesthetic mortality risk rises to 1.33%, that is 13 times higher ². 

 

For underweight dogs (and nearly all small dogs are), the probability of death rises 15-fold.

 

A scale and polish in the UK costs between £300 and £600 ³. Pre-op tests not included. And it has to be repeated every 12–18 months.

 

80% of dogs over the age of three have dental problems ⁴. 

But 90% of owners think their dog's mouth is healthy.

 

Biscuit hadn't died of bad luck. She'd died because I didn't know there were alternatives.

That night I cried for two hours. Then I started searching Google in desperation.

The Conversation That Saved Olivia

I was having dinner with my sister-in-law Laura — a paediatric nurse at the children's hospital in Sheffield, a woman who falls for nothing and who's more sceptical than me about anything to do with health. 

 

I told her everything: Biscuit, Olivia, the heart murmur, the fear of the form.

 

She put her fork down and said:

"Hels, do you know my mother-in-law's been using a natural spray on her Pinscher for a year and a half? 

 

Her daughter's vet recommended it because the dog was 13 and they couldn't operate any more. 

 

It's called Furvital, you just lift the lip and spray."

 

Me, sceptical as ever: "Laura, as if that natural stuff actually works. 🙄"

 

She got her phone out and showed me the photos her mother-in-law had sent her on WhatsApp. 

 

My hands started shaking.

The dog in the "before" photos had exactly the same mouth as Olivia. Black tartar everywhere. 

 

In the "after", three months later, it looked like a different dog. White teeth. Pink gums. A different animal. 

 

"Laura, are you serious?"

 

"Dead serious, Hels. Call my mother-in-law yourself if you don't believe me, I'll send you the number."

 

I called her that same evening. A lovely woman of 68, gentle voice. 

 

She confirmed everything: "Madam, I was just like you. Sceptical. But my Alfie is 13, I couldn't operate on him any more. This spray was the only thing that worked. I spray it on his kibble, he licks it up happily because it tastes of beef, and every week I see the difference." 

 

I ordered my first bottle that night.

How It Really Works (I'll Explain It Nice And Simple)

I was having dinner with my sister-in-law Laura — a paediatric nurse at the children's hospital in Sheffield, a woman who falls for nothing and who's more sceptical than me about anything to do with health. 

 

I told her everything: Biscuit, Olivia, the heart murmur, the fear of the form.

 

She put her fork down and said:

"Hels, do you know my mother-in-law's been using a natural spray on her Pinscher for a year and a half?" 

 

Her daughter's vet recommended it because the dog was 13 and they couldn't operate any more. 

 

It's called Furvital, you just lift the lip and spray."

 

Me, sceptical as ever: "Laura, as if that natural stuff actually works. 🙄"

 

She got her phone out and showed me the photos her mother-in-law had sent her on WhatsApp. 

 

My hands started shaking.

The dog in the "before" photos had exactly the same mouth as Olivia. Black tartar everywhere. 

 

In the "after", three months later, it looked like a different dog. White teeth. Pink gums. A different animal. 

 

"Laura, are you serious?"

 

"Dead serious, Hels. Call my mother-in-law yourself if you don't believe me, I'll send you the number."

 

I called her that same evening. A lovely woman of 68, gentle voice. 

 

She confirmed everything: "Madam, I was just like you. Sceptical. But my Alfie is 13, I couldn't operate on him any more. This spray was the only thing that worked. I spray it on his kibble, he licks it up happily because it tastes of beef, and every week I see the difference." 

 

I ordered my first bottle that night.

The Real Reason Your Dog Has Tartar (And It's Not Your Fault)

Wait, now I have to tell you something important and I want you to read it properly.

 

If your dog has tartar, bad breath, swollen gums — it's not your fault.

 

Stop a moment. Breathe. You're not looking after your dog badly. You're not a bad owner. You're not lazy. 

 

You're none of the things the vet makes you feel with that look when he says "madam, you should have prevented this with a toothbrush."

 

The problem is something else. Nobody ever gave you a weapon that actually works.

Think about it for a second:

 

A toothbrush? Your dog runs off under the bed. You tried, you gave up. 95% of owners abandon it. You're not the exception, you're the norm.

 

Dental sticks and dental chews? Your dog swallows them in 10 seconds. 

 

They don't even touch the back molars, which are exactly where the tartar really forms.

 

Water additives? The calcium in tartar doesn't dissolve in liquid. It's basic chemistry. You can put whatever you like in there, nothing happens.

 

Bones and chew toys? They only clean the front teeth, the ones you can see. The problem is at the back.

 

Tartar isn't soft plaque. 72 hours after it forms it becomes biological cement, fused to the tooth enamel ⁹. Once it's like that, nothing you buy at the pet shop will shift it. Physically impossible.

 

Your vet told you "the only solution is descaling under anaesthetic." And with the traditional methods, that's true.

 

But over the last five years british veterinary research has made incredible progress on the oral microbiome of dogs. 

 

And they've discovered that tartar can be destabilised from the inside, by working on the chemistry of the saliva and on rebalancing the bacteria.

 

That's what Furvital does. And it's exactly what I'd have wanted to know three years ago, before I lost Biscuit.

The Questions I Was Asking Myself (And That You're Probably Asking Yourself Right Now)

Before buying, I spent two days putting questions to the customer service and to Laura's mother-in-law. I'll give you all of them, because I'm sure you're asking yourself the same things:

 

"But if it really worked, my vet would already have told me, wouldn't he?"

 

Look, I'll be honest with you. UK vets are brilliant at intervention medicine (operations, anaesthetic, surgery). But on dental prevention… let's say many of them are still stuck ten years ago. It's not out of malice. It's that a descaling brings in £300–£600, a spray doesn't. You do the maths.

 

"My dog won't let you near his mouth even if you pay him."

 

Perfect, neither would mine. You don't have to open his mouth. You spray it on the food, he licks it up happily because the flavour is natural beef (not mint like human toothpaste, which dogs hate). At the start I only sprayed it on Olivia's kibble. After two weeks she'd come running when I opened the cupboard because she'd worked out it was "tasty". 

 

"My dog is 13 / has a heart problem / has dodgy kidneys."

 

It's exactly for dogs like yours that this product exists. Olivia has a heart murmur and I gave it to her with no worries. Zero contraindications. Formula with no alcohol, no xylitol, no chlorhexidine, no parabens. Even if he swallows it, nothing happens. 

 

"Does it contain xylitol? I've read it's toxic to dogs."

 

Zero xylitol. Zero alcohol. Zero chlorhexidine. Zero colourings. 100% natural. I swear, I read the label 15 times because I was scared too. 

 

"How long do I have to wait to see results?"

 

The average times (more or less the ones I saw with Olivia): 

 

- 3–7 days: less unbearable breath 

- 2–3 weeks: less red gums, less bleeding 

- 4–6 weeks: the tartar starts to come away (little black bits on the cushion, on the kibble, on the floor) 

- 60–90 days: visible transformation

 

If after 3 months you don't see results, there's the refund (I'll explain below).

 

"Is it a scam like the ones on Facebook?"

 

Well, look. I asked myself the same question. I looked the company up on the official register, I checked the company registration, I rang their number (yes, they actually answer 😅). 

 

It's a small independent lab that makes the product in limited batches. They've got no multinationals behind them, no sponsors. They do it all themselves, at their own pace.

The Parcel Arrived After 3 Days

Let me tell you how it went, day by day, no filter. 

 

Week 1 — "All right, let's try it, I've got the guarantee anyway"

 

Tuesday evening. Two sprays on Olivia's kibble. She sniffed it, gave me a look like "what's this?" and then started eating normally. 

 

First hurdle cleared: she doesn't refuse it.

 

The first 3–4 days, no visible change. I was sceptical, I kept thinking "yeah, money down the drain again."

 

Day 5: in the evening, while she was licking my hand, I noticed her breath was different.

 

Not advert-fresh, but less unbearable. 

 

I thought I was imagining it, I swear.

 

Week 2 — "Hang on, what's happening?"

 

Day 10. My daughter Sophie (16, who knows nothing about what I'm doing) comes into the living room while Olivia is asleep in my arms and says: "Mum, Olivia doesn't smell any more. Have you noticed?"

 

My heart stopped for a second. Because Sophie didn't know. So it wasn't me imagining it.

 

Day 14: I look at Olivia's gums. Less red. Less swollen. I run a finger along the gumline and it doesn't bleed like before.

 

Week 3 — "OH MY GOODNESS"

Day 22. I'm cleaning the cushion where Olivia sleeps and I find a black piece, hard, the size of a lentil.

 

I picked it up. It was a piece of tartar. Come away on its own during the night while she chewed her little toy.

 

I swear I started crying. I rang Laura shouting: "LAURA. LAURA. The tartar's coming away! I found a bit on the cushion! IT COMES OFF, LAURA!"

 

She replied: "Hels, breathe, you absolute nutter, ahahah" 😂

 

Weeks 4–5 — "My goodness, it really works"

 

Day 30. Olivia starts gnawing a hard biscuit that before she'd leave there for three days.

 

She didn't have any more pain in her mouth.

I started taking weekly photos. 

 

The front canines — before, completely black — show streaks of white enamel at the bottom, near the gum. The tartar comes away from the bottom upwards.

 

Weeks 6–8 — "She looks like a different dog"

 

Day 50. Olivia yawns and you can see half her teeth are white. Her breath is completely normal. My daughter Sophie has started giving her little kisses on the head again. My husband lets her sleep on the bed.

She's gone back to being part of the family the way Biscuit had been.

 

Weeks 10–12 — "The vet couldn't believe it"

 

Day 75. I go back to the same vet who, three months earlier, had told me "she needs the descaling".

 

I open Olivia's mouth for him. Total silence for 20 seconds. Then he looks at me and says: "Mrs Carter but… what have you done?" 

 

I told him everything. He picked up the bottle. He photographed it. He told me: "Send me the link? I want to try it on my Jack Russell."

 

I didn't have to sign any form. The tartar was down by about 75%.

 

Today — 6 months on

Olivia is 10, with teeth as clean as a puppy's, she eats hard kibble, sleeps on the bed, licks my face and I don't pull away any more.

 

I keep using Furvital every day because prevention doesn't stop. 

 

And every now and then in the evening I think about Biscuit. 

 

And I think that if I'd had this product three years ago, my first little dog would still be here. ❤️

What I Understood About The Price (And It Made Me Angry)

Now let me tell you another thing that made me furious

 

Descaling under anaesthetic 

 

£300–£600 a session + £50–£100 of pre-op tests + the anaesthetic risk. 

 

It has to be repeated every 12–18 months.

 

Real cost: about £400 a year to risk your dog's life. 

 

Dental sticks, dental chews, various snacks → £15–£25 a month for products that don't work (or that contain hidden sugars that make the tartar worse). 

 

Cost: about £250 a year thrown away.

 

Furvital → £29,99 a bottle that lasts 30–45 days. under £30 a month to actually solve the problem.

 

And let me tell you another thing I found out afterwards: if you subscribe directly on their site you pay even less (about 30% off) and every month the bottle arrives at your door automatically. 

 

I went for that option after the second bottle, because I kept forgetting to reorder it. 

 

You can cancel the subscription whenever you want, there's no tie-in. 

 

No worries, no stress, it turns up on your doormat without you doing anything.

 

I was spending double to:

 

- Solve nothing 

- Feel guilty every evening 

- Risk my dog's life 

 

I felt stupid. Seriously.

I Understand If You're Sceptical, I Was Too

Trusting a product after reading a story online, from someone you don't know? It's scary.

 

I was extremely sceptical. I kept thinking "what if it's yet another piece of rubbish?

 

What if Olivia gets worse? What if I throw away more money?"

 

Then I saw that Furvital has a 365-day guarantee.

 

That is: you pay £29, you use it for a whole year. If you see even the smallest improvement, you keep it. 

 

If you see nothing, you write an email and they refund you everything. You don't even have to send the bottle back. 

 

That's what convinced me. I had a whole year to decide whether it worked. 

 

Olivia had an alternative to the operating theatre.

 

What was the real risk? Waiting longer and taking Olivia in for the anaesthetic, hoping she'd wake up.

Now I've Finally Stopped Being Afraid

Do you know what the biggest difference is?

 

Before, I'd wake at night thinking "Olivia's tartar is getting worse, I need to take her to the vet, but what if she ends up like Biscuit?". 

 

Every breath of Olivia's that sounded odd made me jump. Every time she yawned I thought "she's poisoning herself from the inside with the tartar bacteria".

 

Now I leave the house calm. I do the three sprays on the kibble, Olivia eats happily, I go to work. 

 

Five seconds a day. Done.

 

And I've stopped feeling guilty. I've stopped putting it off. I've stopped having that knot in my stomach telling me "you have to do something, but you don't know what".

 

If you're reading this, you've probably got that knot in your stomach too.

If you’d like to try the product that saved Olivia

OK, I want to be crystal clear. I don't work for Furvital, I don't earn a penny, I have no affiliate discount codes. 

 

I'm writing this article because I'd have wanted to read it myself three years ago, before losing Biscuit.

 

I'll tell you honestly: I don't want to sell you anything. 

 

I've just shared my experience because I wouldn't want you to go through what happened to me.

 

But I do have to tell you one thing, because I found it out by ringing the company's number directly: 

 

Furvital is made by a small independent lab. They make a limited number of bottles, no more. 

 

They've got no sponsorships, no pharmaceutical companies behind them, no millions in budget. 

 

They make what they can control with their own hands, bottle by bottle, because live probiotics require very strict checks. 

 

So here's my honest advice: if you try adding it to the basket and the product is available, it means it's there. 

 

If it's not available, you wait for the next batch. I'm telling you my story, then the choice is only yours.

 

No fake urgency. There's just a small independent lab doing things properly, at the pace it takes.

When I placed my order, this is what I found

Furvital spray bottle — £29,99 (lasts 30–45 days), but by taking the 3 + 1 free bundle I paid less per bottle and got the fourth bottle FREE

 

so I ended up with an extra bottle without spending anything. 

 

Delivery — free across the UK

 

There's a 365-day guarantee: if it doesn't work, they give you your money back. No stress!

Check Availability Now

What Other Owners Wrote To Me After I Posted My Story On Facebook

Questions Other Owners Always Ask Me

Is it OK for puppies too?

From 6 months up, yes. Under 6 months, wait — the little teeth are still coming through and it's not needed.

My dog is diabetic, can I use it?

Look, Olivia isn't diabetic but Laura's mother-in-law had a diabetic dog and used it with no problems (with the vet's OK). Sugar-free formula, no alcohol, nothing that interferes. If your dog is on treatment, a two-minute call to the vet to be safe and off you go.

Do I definitely have to spray it in his mouth?

No. You've got 3 possible ways:

Straight in the mouth (if the dog cooperates) On the kibble (what I do 👍) On a chew toy

I've used method 2 for 6 months. Olivia has never noticed a thing :)

Doesn't the taste put him off?

Quite the opposite. It tastes of natural beef. Olivia now comes running when I open the cupboard because she knows I'm about to get the bottle out. 😂

Can I use it with a raw/BARF diet?

Absolutely yes. In fact it's compatible precisely because it has no chemical additives. It says so explicitly on the site.

And if it doesn't work? Do I lose 

my money?

No. 365-day total guarantee. You write an email, they refund you, you don't even have to send the bottle back. I never asked for a refund because it worked, but that guarantee gave me the confidence to try.

And if it doesn't work? Do I lose 

my money?

No. 365-day total guarantee. You write an email, they refund you, you don't even have to send the bottle back. I never asked for a refund because it worked, but that guarantee gave me the confidence to try.

I Do Have To Tell You Something Though…

Since I posted this story on my Facebook profile, lots of owners have been writing to me wanting to know where I bought it.

 

I checked the official site this morning and saw that stock is limited (they make 500 bottles/ month, as I told you). 

 

I don't know how many are left right now, but it's worth checking today whether it's still available. 

 

When I ordered months ago it cost exactly what it costs today. I don't know whether the price will stay like this with demand having gone up.

The Choice Is Yours

You can carry on like this. Buying dental sticks that don't work. 

 

Feeling guilty every evening. Putting off the vet visit until it's too late. 

 

And one day you'll sign that form, the way I signed it.

 

Or you can do what I did. You can try the third way: real care, no anaesthetic, no risk, no stress.

 

But above all: you've still got your dog, alive and well, in front of you.

 

I don't have Biscuit any more. 

I can't go back. 

 

But you can.

 

You can take that form out of your life today, right now, before it becomes a memory that destroys you.

 

And in 90 days, when you see the first little bit of tartar on your dog's cushion, you'll think "thank God I did it in time".

 

Don't wait to live through what I lived through.

 

Do it now, while there's still time. ❤️

Check Availability Now

Free Shipping / 365-day Warranty / No Risks

Author: Martha Giussy

Reviewed by Ms. Eleanor Whitmore (Canine veterinary Istitute)

Sources & References

Royal Veterinary College & University of Manchester, "Mortality Related to General Anaesthesia and Sedation in Dogs under UK Primary Veterinary Care", Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, 2022.

² Brodbelt D.C. et al., "The risk of death: the Confidential Enquiry into Perioperative Small Animal Fatalities (CEPSAF)", Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, 2008.

³ Average UK veterinary clinic price list, national survey 2024–2026. [VERIFY]

⁴ American Veterinary Dental College, "Statistics on Canine Periodontal Disease", 2023.

⁵ Brown A.C. et al., "Probiotics and Oral Microbiome in Companion Animals", Journal of Veterinary Dentistry, 2021. [FORMULA]

⁶ Gawor J. et al., "The effect of Ascophyllum nodosum supplementation on oral health in dogs", Veterinary Medical Science, 2019. [FORMULA]

Clinical Oral Investigations, "Chlorophyllin and Volatile Sulfur Compounds: a Review", 2020.

⁸ Pedanius Dioscorides, De Materia Medica (77 AD).

⁹ American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA), "Dental Health Guidelines for Dogs", 2024.

Note: This article reflects the author's personal experience. Individual results may vary. For cases of advanced periodontal disease or acute pain, always consult your trusted vet. Furvital is a cosmetic oral-care product for dogs, not a veterinary medicine.