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Trudy

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Posts posted by Trudy

  1. It's not the expense, it is that to me, the therapeutic level is not the deciding factor on renewing his meds - his organ function is.

    Or at least with every other vet he's ever been to it has been. Just seems they are testing the wrong thing.

     

    On the bright side, I have plenty of KBr left until we are somewhere else so at least they won't be making me have a KBr level done on him too.

  2. That's what I thought, but the vet tech is telling me no.

     

    She's also telling me it isn't required. I said fine, but I want it done anyway.

    This vet won't refill his pb rx until they do level testing every year. Um, making sure his organs are still ok would be a much bigger concern to me.

    Can't wait to have vet choices again!

  3. From veterinarypartner.com

    The most common side effects of meloxicam are nausea, appetite loss, vomiting or diarrhea. If any of the above are noted, meloxicam should be discontinued and the pet brought in for a liver enzyme and renal parameter blood test. In most cases, the reaction is minor and resolves with symptomatic relief, but it is important to rule out whether or not the patient has more than just a routine upset stomach.

  4. Ryan was on 1000mg 2x a day. We halved that and the vet went to 1x a day.

    And like Judy said, expect a drunk dog for a bit until they adjust. Poor Ryan couldn't stand up without almost falling over. He was falling into doors/walls or anything else he was near.

     

    Neither of the vets we've been with have carried it, I have to order it from a compounding pharmacy

     

    We were also able to reduce the amt of pb he was on when we added the KBr

  5. Ryan is on pb and KBr. He used to still have occasional seizures and for a while, he'd have at least one a month. His seizures last at 5 mins and then he'll have another within a couple of days.

    He's not had a seizure in 16 months (following the once a month for 8 months)

     

    Having a seizure every 6 weeks doesn't seem controlled to me. Time to check his med levels and either increase the pb or add another med to go with it (KBr is usually the second choice, but there are others as well - gabapentin is another option)

     

    Aim for control, not seeing another seizure is a bonus.

     

     

  6. I have 10 year olds that run. Well, one of them still runs like a crazy 2 year old. The other one not so much for quite a while, but he will happily trot along at times. Jet happily races T down the beach and back a few times until she's tired and then she goes on her way to poke around while T keeps going and going and going.

     

    If he's fresh off the track and was still running before he was adopted out, he should not be so out of shape that he can't run for 30 seconds.

    It's likely where he ran wasn't perfectly flat or free from something to step on or trip over or stumble into.

    I'd personally give it a few days, unless the limp gets quite a bit worse, before going to the vet.

  7. $150 for bloodwork here and unless I'm dropping off an animal that had bloodwork done in recent weeks, they are not doing surgery on a dog of mine without bloodwork.

    No idea what the price is here for a spay or neuter.

    When we dropped T off for his neuter, I signed paperwork saying he was to have bloodwork done before hand and if the shelter didn't normally pay for it, I would.

     

     

     

    When I was looking at adopting an unaltered female, I think I was quoted around $300-400 in Salem, MA for the spay.

     

  8. I'm well aware that you said ask your vet - that's why it's in the quote. But so many people just give their dogs aspirin willy nilly so it was worth repeating and emphasizing IMO.

     

    And since I have experience with a dog that pees out more protein than his body can make on Enalapril, again, I felt it was worth repeating as to why aspirin could be a very bad choice.

  9. Ask your vet about adding low-dose aspirin with the enalapril--PLN dogs are more prone to throw a clot.

     

    DO NOT do that without first making sure it is ok with the vet and s/he's sure it won't be a problem.

    Giving Ryan aspirin could have killed him because he was so FULL of clots. And there's no way I'd even chance it now for anything - who knows how he's clotting now.

     

     

     

    His values are low enough that I personally really wouldn't be too concerned about any issues.

  10. She does have blood in her stool because her stool in like tar.

     

    Are the vets aware of this?

     

     

    Since she's drinking some, I'd get some pediolite (I am pretty sure you can give that to dogs - check with the vet first) and maybe some ensure or the kid version of nutrition in a can. Maybe she'd be willing to drink some of that until you can calm down her gut so she can eat some real food again. Just look at the ingredients first - if I were to give it to one of my dogs, it would screw him up since he's allergic to many of the ingredients. But if your dog will do ok with the stuff in there, I'd give it a try.

  11. Before we started Ryan on the Enalapril, we did a blood pressure study to make sure he'd be ok taking it. Hard to do for a dog that gets stressed when he walks through the door to the vet. So we came armed with a marrow bone to occupy him and the vet gave us some blankets on the floor of the OR and we hung out for about 45 mins with the door mostly closed - Ry's bp reading would spike each time the vet came in the room to check on us :lol

  12. Ryan's last protein creatinine ratio was above 6. He was put on Enalapril when that value was over 9. It isn't being used as a hypertensive, it's being used for the kidney's - it can help decrease protein loss and possibly slow the progression of kidney failure.

     

    Ryan eats Solid Gold Mmillennia - it's lower in protein and phosphorus - not as low as an Rx diet, but not nearly as costly either.

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