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XTRAWLD

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Posts posted by XTRAWLD

  1. I am grateful I haven't had to deal with an amp, but I have had to deal with cancer and treatment with chemo. Things don't always go as planned, and sometimes the road you travel changes. You are right, this forum and it's members help and support you in times of need. Turn to us if you need info and help and support, we'll try to help you as best we can. I agree with others, you didn't sound bitchy or petulant. We've all heard what that sounds like! This is an exceptional situation for you.

     

    The first few weeks from what I understand from others' experiences are the most difficult, but she is at the vet now where they can care for her, monitor her and get her hopefully into a better state to be able to go home to you again so you can continue her care. When you get her home I'm certain she will change for the better with her mood and will begin to feel better overall. I know that is so hard to see right now, but your end goal is to have her bright and vibrant and back with you! Keep your eye on the prize.

     

    Visiting her I'm sure will help her too, although I know it's likely heartbreaking. On other notes, is she eating well? Is she learning how to be a three legged dog? How has she been behaving otherwise? How is her spirit, etc.

     

    And isn't Twiggy's story inspirational! She's a very lucky girl :)

  2. Yeah, I agree something spooked him and he's put off by going through the doorway. It's created a bad association for him, and now you have to make it a good association. It could be anything....

     

    maybe the door was closed and he walked into it (like a glass/screen door)

    he may have slipped on the floor

    something in the area fell while he was walking by

    perhaps someone else was in the entryway that was incredibly scary

    maybe a loud noise outside occurred when he walked out one time and he associated it with the door.

     

    You'd be surprised things they pick up on that really mean nothing to us in daily life.

     

    Start using some treats to lure him in and get him happy to walk through the door again. Give him praise when he does on his own accord like it is going out of style! You want him walking through the door to be the best experience EVER!

  3. https://tail-bandit.com/

     

    I didn't notice anything on their Web site about it being medically tested or recommended by veterinarians. If it works safely and the plastics are free of damaging chemicals seeping into the wound, might be a good option.

     

     

    This thread is 7 years old. Fortunately our hounds' happy tail wounds have healed well without anyone losing their tail.

    Clotisol stops wound bleeding on our excessive bleeders: http://www.entirelypets.com/clotisol2oz.html

    And one post by a newbie brought it back, so it might lean more towards drumming up business.....

  4. Are you able to post a pic? My boy once had a very nasty cut on the side of his toe and I'm very lucky it healed up well. I soaked his foot in epsom salt baths 4 times a day and sprayed colloidal silver on it regularly to ensure it didn't get infected (easily did that for a week) and thankfully it healed on it's own and didn't need stitches, but it very well likely could have turned out to go that direction. He was leash walked so the risk of it opening again was minimized.

     

    Try to get her to stay off her feet and no runs!

  5. To be honest, I have found that staying on top of Ry's teeth with brushing doesn't work. But what does? Chewing on a smoked cow knuckle. He will usually gnaw on one for 10 mins every night and I'm very fortunate he does it as often as he does. If he got a new bone, he'd be at it for an hour I'm sure. I have really noticed a difference over the last 8 months because he can chew a bone when he wants, instead of mommy forgetting to always offer one. The additive to water doesn't work, but I also use CS as an additive once a day to his meals to keep bad breath and gingivitis at bay too.

  6. Appetite is good, and I would use that to your advantage to help him rebuild his red blood cells naturally and as much as possible and get some weight back. It takes 6 weeks for the count to increase naturally so the sooner you start adding some iron rich foods, the better. They loose weight so much so quickly when they get sick.

  7. I feel for you with managing allergies with Rocket. Kasey did not get much relief from Benadryl but he also had more than just environmental allergy. Out of curiosity, has benadryl ever worked for Rocket?

     

    Also, you can consider applying a cortisone cream which might help. I used it on Kasey's ears as there was no chance he could lick there, not sure if it's so good for where Rocket can access.

  8. I assume in 5-10 mins the cookies were not really well digested that you could tell? If they were nearly the same as when they went in, I wonder if they never even made it to the stomach?

     

    I'd experiment with a different treat for bedtime/snacks and see what the reaction is. Ryder has slowly transitioned from eating milkbones (as they are so dry) to soft Bacon Strips instead just because the milkbones keep getting stuck in his throat before bed, and he hacks and coughs to get them up if they went down wrong. I find during the day when he's "active" the milkbones don't get stuck (and I've figured this is a result of an "awake" body....if he's been napping for a while and I give him the milkbones, it's like the saliva and mouth isn't working yet!)

     

    Bile means the stomach is empty, and has been irritated in some form. I'd suggest Pepcid as well, but I don't think this situation warrants that yet, since there isn't this reaction during meal time. I'd try different treats first.

  9. Agreed with the above. Some take longer to dissolve depending on the degree of the the extraction, but they are there to hold everything together. 2 weeks is a bit long, but likely they will fall out any day now. Likely the vet you are going to see today might just gently tug them out, or will ensure there isn't an infection and will let it be. Soft food is a good call.

  10. Got scared by the title, wondered why you need a canine removal and then realized it's a tooth!

     

    To be fair, a canine tooth (let alone all 4 at once) is not an easy extraction, but I do not have direct experience with this. I'm certain more will chime in. Wealth of knowledge here. At her age I would be concerned going ahead with this surgery. Good on you for getting all of your information prior to proceeding.

     

    Gentle scritches to Ginger!

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