This is a specific conversation about Puppy teething — surviving it and protecting your home — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Teething is one of the most intense periods of puppyhood — and for flat-faced breeds like Pekingese, it can be genuinely more uncomfortable than it is for other dogs, because their compressed jaw structure means the teeth have less room to move through. Having the right chew toys available — firm enough to satisfy the urge to gnaw but safe for delicate developing teeth, and ideally chillable to calm inflamed gums — makes a real difference to both the puppy's comfort and how much of your home survives. Your vet has already flagged the cooling angle, which is exactly right. Can I ask: how old is your Pekingese, what's the main symptom you're seeing — lots of chewing, drooling, pawing at the mouth — and is there anything specific at home that's already taken a hit?
She's 9 weeks old. The vet mentioned her gums look quite swollen and said to get something she can chew that we can chill in the fridge. She's been chewing the corner of the sofa already and she seems really unsettled sometimes, especially in the evenings.
inparticular.ai
Nine weeks is right at the start of the teething window, and swollen gums this early usually means the discomfort is coming in waves — which explains the evening unsettledness, since puppies often feel it more when they're winding down and there's less distraction. The sofa corner is a classic target because the edge gives them something firm to press against. A chillable toy gives her a legitimate outlet for that pressure and the cold brings real relief to inflamed tissue. What I'd recommend here is the Nylabone Puppy Chew Freezer Toy — it's specifically designed for puppies under 16 weeks, made from a softer nylon that's firm enough to satisfy but won't damage milk teeth, and it's built to go straight in the fridge. It also has a textured surface that works against the gum line, which is exactly what a brachycephalic pup needs when she can't bite down as deeply as a longer-snouted breed. It's widely available on Amazon UK and usually under £10. Pop it in the fridge for a couple of hours before her difficult evening period and offer it when she starts getting restless.
That sounds good. Is the nylon safe if she actually manages to chew bits off? She's tiny but she's surprisingly determined.
inparticular.ai
Totally fair question, and it's the right instinct to check. Nylabone puppy toys are made from a softer nylon compound than their adult range, and at 9 weeks a Pekingese won't generate enough bite force to break pieces off — she'll rasp small amounts of flavoured material from the surface, which is normal and passes through safely. The rule with any chew toy is to retire it once it becomes small enough to fit entirely in the mouth, or if you see a large chunk break away — but with a puppy this age and this size, that's very unlikely with a Nylabone. Just give it a rinse before each use and check it over visually every few days. You'll know it's time to replace it when the texture starts wearing smooth and she loses interest.
Great, I'll order that today. Should I get more than one so I can keep one cold while she's using the other?
inparticular.ai
Yes — that's actually a brilliant idea and exactly what I'd suggest. Having two means one is always cold and ready, and you're not waiting for it to re-chill mid-session when she's already distressed. It also means if she loses one behind the sofa (very common at 9 weeks), you're not suddenly without. They're inexpensive enough that a second one is very much worth it.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.