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I had never bought a pet before, so I really was ignorant to the situation that I was contributing to. I really did feel she was better off with me. |
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He never showed any signs except for being small, I had took him to his vet for testing because i had hoped to use him for breeding one day, he was also neutered while at UT...I am betting that your little one had to many vaccines together that caused the convulsions...the first time she had them could have been caused by having all the worms |
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I took Daisy to her original vet yesterday to have her bile acid test repeated since the first one was so high, the results came back and the non fasting one was high again. To continue testing and surgery is out of my financial situation, since all indications lead to liver shunt we are going to work with diet and medication. I feel completely helpless and like I am just watching her die, I haven't stopped crying in two days. Just looking at her breaks my heart. The people around me have no idea how devastating this is to me. |
I very much understand your feelings and also the fact that the surgery is out of your budget. I had the same problem when my Mia showed signs and tested with high bile acids. I couldn't afford all of the expensive costs either. I went with low protein diet and supplements, I had a very good vet that was willing to try anything that I read about that might help. We did preventive antibiotics and also gave her lactilouse before or after she ate. Those were things that I learned about on a yorkshire terrier website/support group that was primarily about liver shunt. She started at 3 years old and because of test results we assumed that she had MVD. With this type you have multiple shunts through out the liver and the surgery doesn't work on this type. All you can do is diet and supplements. There is one other test called a protein c test that if it comes back high this will most likely tell you that it is multivascular or MVD. I did finally loose her at 6 years old to seizures last September, it broke my heart and I will never forget her. But all of the good times and memories are very precious to me and she will be forever in my heart. Do lots of reading and find a good vet that is willing to work with you. You might even join the Yorkie group for babies with liver shunt, you will learn a lot and they are good support. Hang in there. She may live a long good life, it just may take a little more work and special help from you, but you can do it. God bless you and your little fur baby. |
Go to yahoo and search for Liver Shunt & MVD/HMD Support, there is a place to click and join the group. |
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Praying for your baby:hands: :love: |
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You haven't done anything wrong, you are just like everyone on here that bought their first pet, Yorkie, and many of us were not educated about the breed. Yorkies are 40 percent more likely to have liver shunt then any other breed, it can happen with other animals also. Talk to your vet and change her diet right away, that is essential. Liver shunt babies can not handle the high protein in most dog foods. They have different brands dry and canned. The l/d diet is important as are the liver supplements that can help with the build up of toxins in their blood and help control more damage to the liver. Ask about the Lactalous, it keeps there stool from being hard and also breaks down the toxins when they eat. A very small amount is all you use and it is not very expensive. You have to get it at a people pharmacy, so you need a prescription from the vet. You can also feed a small amount of boiled chicken & rice, cottage cheese, yogurt, veggies for treats. The key is small amounts and very little protein. I don't know everything but I lived the life with a MVD baby, and I am here for you. I had to learn, you can p.m. me anytime. Don't take what others say to heart no one feels your pain or knows your situation. Sending a prayer and a big hug to you. |
dont give up.. please apply for care credit. I just had a dog that had spinal issues and thought we would have to have surgery. I have had a few difficult years and money is an issue.. I got the care credit.. what a relief!! Also.. this is a very last resort... if you can pay for the surgery and it means she will not live you may give her to a rescue that would do the surgery. I know that would be the hardest thing in the world but at least the baby would live. Sending prays that she has the version that is easily controlled by diet!! |
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