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wooohoooo wonderful news! I am SO happy for all of you! Go Phoebe! :) |
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Sounds like you have a wonderful vet!!! :) |
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Ditto. |
Great news :) |
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Will continue to keep you all in our thoughts and prayers! :hands: ((huggs)) |
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Coccidia can show up in dogs coming from any kennel, including show breeders because their dogs are exposed to many other dogs. The cysts can be picked up off the ground even though the owner picked up the dogs feces and disposed of it properly. It does not mean that the breeder does not take care of their dogs.It can be picked up in a dog park, or on a walk, anywhere where another dog has been. It can lie dormant in a dog for their entire lives. The fact is most dogs carry it. Not only dogs, other animals. They can get it from rabbit feces or deer feces. It is a very common parasite. You seem to bring up alot of issues here that are unrelated to the subject of parasites. What it all boils down to is do your homework before you buy. But parasites are not necessarily indicarive of neglected dogs or filthy conditions. |
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Prayers for your wee one and hope that she does get to come quickly. |
No, they are not indicative of bad breeding; but, let's face it, most bad breeders do have coccidia and other problems running rampant in their kennels. And, let's also face the fact that the number of poorly bred dogs far outweigh well bred ones. As for picking coccidia up at a dog park, honestly I don't see that happening since most healthy dogs do not get it. It is the puppies and immuno-suppressed that are most at risk. And, who is going to allow their pups to ingest the feces of other animals? The only way that will happen is if they let them run unattended. |
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I suppose they could tell the buyer, but what good would it do if the puppy is not sick. It does no good to treat them if they are not sick? Many vets routinely test stool samples but if it is not active it won't show up in the stool either. This is one of those things that just happen, that no one is to blame. If the new owner gets the puppy to the vet to get it treated it will be fine. When you adopt a living thing, you should know that there is a chance that they will get sick, and they might even require expensive operations or even die. Those things are not anyones fault. It's just part of life. |
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Albon does not come in IV form but there is one that does , not sure what it is though. (8 yrs ago my uncle bought a chih pup , had coccidia. Took her to the vet. He gave Albon, puppy could not keep it down. Uncle called me & asked what he should do. I told him take her back to the vet tomorrow. He did , the vet kept her over the next 2 days. Called my uncle and said he could pick her up. For the next 13 days she had 3 more 2 day stays at the vet. The last time he brought her home he gave her the Albon and AGAIN she vomited. On that same day he brought her to me in the evening and I cooked chicken for her, she ate and vomited. By the next A.M. I walked into my vets office at opening time, my vet who was standing in the lobby took one look at her and grabbed her rite out of my hands and took her to the back. He came out about 6 or 8 min later , said he started her on IV and then he asked what was going on. I told him what had happened with my uncles vet and told him she has coccidia. He was FURIOUS that the vet ever let her come home the 1st time much less times 2, 3 & 4. He said there is absolutely no reason for this pup to have gotten this bad. He said to me " If this so called vet that your uncle took this dog too would have put her on IV meds from the start she would be near cured by now" Those were his words. Instead we had to euth her the next A.M. because she had developed brain damage from it. He did an autophsy on her at no charge to us, to make sure there were no underlying problems that could have been missed . He called me and said it was deff the coccidia that caused this and that she also had liver damage. He gave me a number and said " your uncle needs to call this # and turn in that vet. So now 2 points #1 there is something in IV form for coccidia and #2 because she is eating does not mean she is out of the woods yet. |
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I agree. I just think that part of breeding...and also rescuing....is educating people. There is nothing wrong with telling someone what "might" happen. That way if something happens they are not at a total loss. |
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Parasites are not exclusive to poor breeders. They are every where. And I do not agree that the poorly bred dogs outweigh the the well bred ones. It's like with bad children. No one pays any attention to the good ones. |
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A good breeder could tell the potential buyer, and frighten them off so they go to a bad breeder who swears that his dogs do not have parasites. Guess who they will buy from. that is why breeders require vet checks. it is the vets responsibility to advise the owners and care for the puppy, and if the puppy gets sick and they want to return it, the breeder should take it back. |
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