Hope your dog doesnt get this :(
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Hope your dog doesnt get this :(
Our lovely 7 year old little monster (yorkshire/something or yorkshire throwback) (she was a rescue dog so we dont quite know what she is, just adorable ) became poorly a week last friday
She was shivering and was off her food, went hiding out of the way and became very unsociable (though not destressed, just curled up out of the way), we thought it was just a little tummy upset but her nose was nice and cold and she showed no other symptoms of it (vomiting etc) so we gave her a day or two to recover.
Unfortunately this didnt happen and on sunday we ran her down to the A&E vets so they could treat her.
Now not being her usual self, she just sat there whilst the vet checked her out (normally she would be sniffing about and licking the vet to death ) but no, still very miserable and sad looking
She was left in whilst the vet did some blood tests and later in the afternoon as diagnosed with the following
Addisons Disease
Addison's Disease in the Dog
The good thing is, is that we got this very early, she had none of the late symptoms of it but she still isnt 100% her usual bouncy "ill run about like a mad monster" attitude is sort of still there but as she is on hormone treatment, she has to take it a little steadier for some time until she stabalises, though unfortunately this isnt curable it is very treatable if you get it early enough.
This story below is one thats not so lucky and very sad for the people involved and I really hope that no one on here has to go though this, it can be fatal
Eddie's Story
Tony
She was shivering and was off her food, went hiding out of the way and became very unsociable (though not destressed, just curled up out of the way), we thought it was just a little tummy upset but her nose was nice and cold and she showed no other symptoms of it (vomiting etc) so we gave her a day or two to recover.
Unfortunately this didnt happen and on sunday we ran her down to the A&E vets so they could treat her.
Now not being her usual self, she just sat there whilst the vet checked her out (normally she would be sniffing about and licking the vet to death ) but no, still very miserable and sad looking
She was left in whilst the vet did some blood tests and later in the afternoon as diagnosed with the following
Addisons Disease
Addison's Disease in the Dog
The good thing is, is that we got this very early, she had none of the late symptoms of it but she still isnt 100% her usual bouncy "ill run about like a mad monster" attitude is sort of still there but as she is on hormone treatment, she has to take it a little steadier for some time until she stabalises, though unfortunately this isnt curable it is very treatable if you get it early enough.
This story below is one thats not so lucky and very sad for the people involved and I really hope that no one on here has to go though this, it can be fatal
Eddie's Story
Tony
#3
Cheers for the heads up and glad yours is on the mend, we are getting our dog later this month so back to Dog ownership and all it brings.....
Tony, I suggest you nip down to your GP as you appear to be in the early stages of Smilyitis or "PDSDS" (Progressive Degnerative Smiley Deployment Syndrome)
Tony, I suggest you nip down to your GP as you appear to be in the early stages of Smilyitis or "PDSDS" (Progressive Degnerative Smiley Deployment Syndrome)
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Cheers for the heads up and glad yours is on the mend, we are getting our dog later this month so back to Dog ownership and all it brings.....
Tony, I suggest you nip down to your GP as you appear to be in the early stages of Smilyitis or "PDSDS" (Progressive Degnerative Smiley Deployment Syndrome)
Tony, I suggest you nip down to your GP as you appear to be in the early stages of Smilyitis or "PDSDS" (Progressive Degnerative Smiley Deployment Syndrome)
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Cheers for the heads up and glad yours is on the mend, we are getting our dog later this month so back to Dog ownership and all it brings.....
Tony, I suggest you nip down to your GP as you appear to be in the early stages of Smilyitis or "PDSDS" (Progressive Degnerative Smiley Deployment Syndrome)
Tony, I suggest you nip down to your GP as you appear to be in the early stages of Smilyitis or "PDSDS" (Progressive Degnerative Smiley Deployment Syndrome)
She's not having a bad day today though she did have a bit of an episode last night where we needed to ring up the vet, popped her another prednisolone and she was as right as rain
Biggest down side to this is that she needs very regular blood tests for quite some time, not sure if she will want to go to the vets after that as she use to like it
Tony
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Just to show that this isnt a dog's disease
JFK's Addison's Disease; Physicians Confirm the Adrenal Gland Illness - The Washington Post | Encyclopedia.com
JFK's Addison's Disease; Physicians Confirm the Adrenal Gland Illness - The Washington Post | Encyclopedia.com
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Interesting post. When I was younger we had a Westie who we had to have put down at 4 years. The vet diagnosed kidney failure but reading the link and noting it affects Westies, am beginning to wonder.
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Not a good illness at all
Anyone who followed the Scooby threads last year, well Scooby is still pretty much the same, and has Auto Immune Disease so is now on Steroids (same as yours Tony) and will be on them for life, he has to go to the vets every 6-8 weeks and now has a much shortened lifespan
His major organs will start to deteriate and fail at some point, and he can come off the steroids and go on other medication, but its a case of suck it and see
He is on 4 steroid tablets a day now, any less and all his old symptoms flare up, and he had antibiotics for 6 months too, but at the moment he is still relatively healthy, but we have been told that could change at any time, also no cure either
Anyone who followed the Scooby threads last year, well Scooby is still pretty much the same, and has Auto Immune Disease so is now on Steroids (same as yours Tony) and will be on them for life, he has to go to the vets every 6-8 weeks and now has a much shortened lifespan
His major organs will start to deteriate and fail at some point, and he can come off the steroids and go on other medication, but its a case of suck it and see
He is on 4 steroid tablets a day now, any less and all his old symptoms flare up, and he had antibiotics for 6 months too, but at the moment he is still relatively healthy, but we have been told that could change at any time, also no cure either
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I did keep up with the scooby threads, its never nice when your dog gets something nasty though ours is being a little sod just now lol, just has the shakes a bit still probably not quite the right dosage on her steroids, but she should live a good life even if she doesnt like swallowing the anti biotic tables
Tony
Tony
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Glad the pooch is picking up
interesting reading in those links, we lost a springer spaniel a few months back only just over 2 yrs old and the symptoms are very very similar. I know from an incident earlier this year she was prescribed some of that medication (potassium and sodium levels) and when she passed it was how the first link described it.
interesting reading in those links, we lost a springer spaniel a few months back only just over 2 yrs old and the symptoms are very very similar. I know from an incident earlier this year she was prescribed some of that medication (potassium and sodium levels) and when she passed it was how the first link described it.
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My German shepherd had something similar, it just came out of the blue, one day she was full of life, the next morning she was totally within herself.
Got her to the vets and she was in the hospital for 2 months on all sorts of medication, the vet said it was some mild form of Leukaemia, but was not sure ?. After a few days she had to have an emergency blood transfusion otherwise she would not be with us now.
The total cost of treatment was just over £7000, with all the blood tests and other stuff. A good case of make sure you have insurance for your pet.
Anyway she is not too bad now other than all the pills she was on has brought on arthritis in her right back hip, mainly due to losing all her muscles, at least she is still with us though.
Glad to hear your pooch is on the mend also.
Edited to say that she is only 6 years old.
Got her to the vets and she was in the hospital for 2 months on all sorts of medication, the vet said it was some mild form of Leukaemia, but was not sure ?. After a few days she had to have an emergency blood transfusion otherwise she would not be with us now.
The total cost of treatment was just over £7000, with all the blood tests and other stuff. A good case of make sure you have insurance for your pet.
Anyway she is not too bad now other than all the pills she was on has brought on arthritis in her right back hip, mainly due to losing all her muscles, at least she is still with us though.
Glad to hear your pooch is on the mend also.
Edited to say that she is only 6 years old.
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Sorry to hear about your dog jaytc it does affect the sodium and potassium levels and soup, yes, pet insurance is definately worth while
So just a bit of an update, our monster had a bit of a relapse due to her immune system being slightly suppressed by the medication (she now has a bladder infection) so that stressed her out a little and made her body use all the steriods we gave her (she was going from 1 steroid every 2 days to 1 every 3 days so she is back to one every 2 days now), but as the vet said about the steroids, she cannot produce any due to the adrenal glands being faulty so its very hard to overdose her on steroids but she is back to her usual self again and she has lost weight (she needs to lose more ) and she is doing quite well otherwise
Tony
So just a bit of an update, our monster had a bit of a relapse due to her immune system being slightly suppressed by the medication (she now has a bladder infection) so that stressed her out a little and made her body use all the steriods we gave her (she was going from 1 steroid every 2 days to 1 every 3 days so she is back to one every 2 days now), but as the vet said about the steroids, she cannot produce any due to the adrenal glands being faulty so its very hard to overdose her on steroids but she is back to her usual self again and she has lost weight (she needs to lose more ) and she is doing quite well otherwise
Tony
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A mat eof mine rang today to say his dog had died last night, ten year old Westie, went a bit strange, ejecing fluids from either end, then died, poor sod and his family are gutted, the dog did go and hide so sounds a bit like this, his daughter doesnt know as she is away on holiday, thats going to be tough.
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09 October 2015 12:25 PM