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Special Needs Puppies With Uncontrollable Shaking Get Second Chance

Special Needs Puppies With Uncontrollable Shaking Get Second Chance

Newsweek22-07-2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A litter of tiny puppies who can't stop shaking have found the perfect home with a rescue center focused on special needs dogs.
Shannon Tarr runs the Emotional Rescue in Hastings, Minnesota, which she set up in 2017 to help care for dogs with special needs.
In June, she got a very special litter of Chow mix puppies—and after sharing a video of them to her TikTok account, @emotionalrescuedogs, both the pups and her work have gone viral.
"They have shaking puppy syndrome," Tarr explained to Newsweek, but added the good news that they "will likely outgrow" the condition.
Shaking puppy syndrome, also known as hypomyelination, affects a dog's nervous system, causing nerves and muscles to malfunction. Symptoms can begin as early as two weeks after birth, and tremors can become more violent while eating, but ease while resting, according to a vet-reviewed report from PetMD.
While there is no treatment for the syndrome, most puppies recover by around a year old, though may still experience mild hind limb tremors.
Tarr told Newsweek: "Their mother was with a breeder, and she had the same condition. When the breeder died, they went to another rescue that transferred them to us."
"We treat them like regular puppies—with lots of playtime and socializing!"
The litter of puppies with Shaking Puppy Syndrome.
The litter of puppies with Shaking Puppy Syndrome.
TikTok @emotionalrescuedogs
In a video shared to her page on June 8, Tarr showed the gorgeous fluffy puppies running around outside together for their morning feed
And while all five puppies appear content, they are shaking non-stop, with one almost lifting its hind legs off the ground as it tries to eat breakfast.
They meet some of the other dogs at the shelter, watch the horses grazing out back, and use their voices to bark at everything interesting, while moving and shaking the entire time.
The video went viral, with more than 730,000 likes and 9.2 million views, as animal lovers' hearts broke for the litter, one calling it "so, so sad" and another sharing sympathy for the "poor babies."
"How do their muscles maintain that movement, that must be exhausting for them," another wrote, as many commenters asked about the condition.
One commenter, who identified themselves as a veterinary technician, assured viewers that pups with shaking puppy syndrome "can live a very long, happy, and goofy twerkful life. They will be just fine."
The litter meeting the other animals at the rescue.
The litter meeting the other animals at the rescue.
TikTok @emotionalrescuedogs
In Tarr's most recent videos of the puppies, shared on July 20, the litter can be seen playing together in the yard, and their tremors appear to have calmed slightly.
Undeterred by their shaking, each of the pups is running, jumping ,and chasing each other while fighting for a chew toy.
One puppy is missing from the litter, however, as he was adopted into a loving forever home just days earlier. And now, the rest of the litter are ready to go to new homes, too.
In the later videos of the puppies, many comments have changed from shocked and saddened to enjoying the puppies for who they are, with one recent commenter writing: "They always make me smile and laugh. So darn cute, shaky and all."
And as another put it: "I love watching all of them. So adorable, and you all get better and stronger every day."
Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@newsweek.com with some details about your best friend and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.
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Medicaid Turns 60 Today. America Needs It Now More Than Ever

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What the Future of Medicaid and Medicare Could Look Like
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What the Future of Medicaid and Medicare Could Look Like

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Sunscreen Boss Slams FDA Recall for Putting Him 'Out of Business'
Sunscreen Boss Slams FDA Recall for Putting Him 'Out of Business'

Newsweek

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Sunscreen Boss Slams FDA Recall for Putting Him 'Out of Business'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The owner of a sunscreen company has criticized the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for putting him "out of business," after his company had to initiate a recall of multiple products that did not meet what he calls "impossible" regulatory requirements. Several Kabana Skin Care products did not meet the specific requirements that come as part of the Current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) regulations, following an FDA inspection, prompting the company to initiate the recall in March. The recall affected consumers in New Jersey, Florida, and Michigan, and the FDA's Class II classification of the recall, released on July 10, indicated that "use of or exposure to a violative product may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences." 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File photos of the Food and Drug Administration headquarters and a spilled bottle of sunscreen. hapabapa left) and Halyna Romaniv (right/Getty Images What To Know The product was recalled because a federal inspector noted one cGMP regulation was not met, Kreider told Newsweek. When asked for the specific regulation, neither the FDA nor Kreider provided the information. Kreider said he found that when reviewing the criteria expected by the FDA for sunscreen products, there was "no conceivable way" he would be able to meet the "rigorous application" of the regulations required, given that his products are organic. "This is because process validation requires chemical consistency batch to batch, which for an edible grade oil like extra virgin olive oil, is simply impossible because such oils are chemically variable batch to batch and season to season, being agricultural produce," he said. Extra virgin olive oil is the main ingredient in his sunscreen product, alongside a few other organic ingredients and zinc oxide, one of the chemicals the FDA deems generally recognized as safe and effective (GRASE) for use in sunscreens. Kreider said that, in comparison, chemical consistency is easier to manage for the non-organic, "petrochemical ingredients" that many pharmaceutical companies use in their sunscreen products. The millions of dollars required to implement methodologies to attempt to meet the regulatory standards for an organic product are not "feasible" for his company, he said, given that its total revenue last year was less than $300,000. In light of that, Kreider has had to pull his sunscreen from manufacture, and has taken his sunscreen off Kabana Skin Care's website entirely. This method of regulation "puts the entire mineral sunscreen made with botanical ingredients industry in jeopardy," he said. Kreider said that, simultaneously, the chemicals permitted in non-organic sunscreen products, which more easily pass the FDA's regulations, are not safe and have "never been tested under the drug regimen." He said these sunscreen products were "public enemy number one in terms of chemical exposure." In 2019, the FDA altered the GRASE ranking for several chemicals, leaving two, zinc oxide and titanium dioxide, as still considered safe, while aminobenzoic acid (PABA) and trolamine salicylate were placed in Category II, meaning they posed risks of "serious detrimental health effects" and could not be used. A long list of other chemicals used in sunscreens was placed in Category III, subject to continued review due to insufficient data, but this did not mean they could no longer be used in sunscreen products during the review process. Studies have since shown that some of the Category III chemicals can be traced in human breast milk, blood and urine, in some cases at levels significantly exceeding the FDA's safety threshold of 0.5 ng/ml. However, the FDA's review is still ongoing. While the FDA regulates sunscreens as drugs, "they are not drugs, because they have never been tested under the testing regimen that the FDA requires of every single other chemical out there to be marketed as a drug, namely, clinical trials and clinical safety data," Kreider said. He added it was "criminal and wrong" that these chemicals, commonly still used in sunscreens, were not being clinically tested, and that he thought it was a "classic example of government regulatory corruption and it's at the expense of every single consumer who uses sunscreens." "Why I was being singled out is beyond me, there are much bigger fish to fry out there," he said. What People Are Saying Erik Kreider, CEO of Kabana Skin Care, told Newsweek: "There's no guarantee that I could even comply with [the regulations] given what the product is made of. I mean, there's fundamental chemical variability and botanical raw materials, and given that situation, they cannot comply with GMP standards. It's just not possible given they're fundamentally variable so I was like well if I'd known that they were going to come after me with this high a level of rigor I wouldn't have probably even started this business." He added: "I use the product daily. I literally use my sunscreens every day. I know they're safe, I know their effective. I have nearly 100 percent customer satisfaction." What Happens Next In the wake of the recall, Kreider has been trying to figure out what to do next, and told Newsweek that while he's trying to keep his business going and his customers have been "clamoring for me to continue offering the formulas," he is no longer making sunscreen. "I'm really trying to determine what I should do here and if I should just roll it up and do something else with my life," he said.

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