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| | #16 | |
| Yorkie Kisses are the Best! Donating Member | Quote:
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| Welcome Guest! | |
| | #17 |
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Rockford, TN
Posts: 27
| Thanks for the information. I plan to ask Gizmo's VET about Vetmedin and Corvental-D. Your description is quite accurate, he is peeing "Like a waterfall"...Thanks.
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| | #18 |
| YT 2000 Club Member Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: USA
Posts: 2,992
| Give your vet a chance. My husband was a physician, and he and I had many conversations about how hard it is sometimes to diagnose medical problems. Often, it is just ruling many things out and moving along with further testing as necessary. And - of course - it is often more difficult with animals - because they can't talk or describe all of their symptoms. My own vet has often performed test to find or rule out problems - and then with further testing, she has been able to come to a more definitive diagnosis. I think one of the worst things people can do - is doctor jump - or vet jump - before it is necessary. I know people's intentions are good, but none of us are vets nor do we know 1% of 1% about the physical conditions and physiology of animals. I suggest letting your vet work with your pet for a while - rule certain conditions or causes out - and then do further testing as necessary. Remember - second opinions cost money - and often you just start back at square one - or move along the same as your other vet would have done. Good vets agree on courses of treament and testing. They may do some testing in a different order, but the end result is usually the same. I remember my dog's back problem - the vet and I looked at each other and she said, "You know, we may never find out what your dog's problem is." I said, "I know." We both realized that we could have go on with expensive testing - MRIs, spinal taps, surgery, etc. -- but without these tests, we only knew the approximate location where my dog's back hurt...and could only guess at what might be going on. Anyway - I hope you learn soon what your puppy's problem is. Good Luck! Carol Jean |
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| | #19 |
| YorkieTalk Newbie! Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: NYC
Posts: 2
| I could not disagree with the previous poster more. Giving a vet many visits to find the right diagnosis is a terrible idea. Once you find the RIGHT vet with the RIGHT experience in your dogs problem diagnoses is immediate. In our case it just came to late to make a big difference in Duke's longevity. Duke is 10 years old and will pass away in the next few days so this is a cautionairy tale. The first piece of the puzzle was the heart murmer. He always had it but each vet that noticed it pronounced it to be a mild murmer. It all started with the cough/yak. First only while playing ball. He started to have trouble holding the ball in his mouth. He'd drop it and give a good Yak. Next came a deeper more persistant yak/clearing of the throat. Vet's focuses on the yaking and throat which turns out not to be the big issue. Six months ago a new vet blamed it on his heart which had become enlarged to the point of pressing on the lower part of his airway. At first this seems counterintuative but as his illness progressed proved to be correct. As of today he probably has a day or two left before heart failure. The murmer led to an enlarged heart which is now struggeling to circulate fully. This is a terrible way to watch Duke die. He is only 10 and up until a few days ago was incredibly vibrant. Played ball constantly. He is the smartest dog I have ever known (we have way too many yorkies!) and basically runs the household as he has an impecable internal clock. Everything must occur at the exact scheduled time or he will let it be known the things are off schedule. Had we paid more attention to the heart than the throat meds might have started sooner and given him more time. Now all we can do is wait for the final bad day to arrive. Heart Murmer + yaking just might have nothing to do with the collapsing trachea problem. Especially if the yaking started in adulthood. Xray the heart. And do it every couple months and find a vet who has seen this problem before so they don't under medicate. http://www.edhamilton.com/public/Duke.JPG |
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| | #20 |
| Yorkie Yakker Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Rockford, TN
Posts: 27
| Gizmo was put to sleep on Feb 5th of this year as he was struggling to breath and choking. He suffered with this for many months and we had no choice. My Vet did check his heart a couple of years back and continued to do that. It was not the heart, it was a collapsed trachea. It is quite upsetting for me to have someone suggest that I may not have been taking proper care of Gizmo who I loved very much. Unless you are a VET I would suggest that you keep your opinions to yourself.
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| | #21 |
| YorkieTalk Newbie! Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: NYC
Posts: 2
| My post was made with the best of intentions and directed at the previous poster who suggested giving one vet several attempts at a diagnosis. This turned out badly for us. Once we found a vet with the right experience in Duke's condition diagnosis was immediate and with the right meds he probably lived a bit longer and a bit more comfortable. My post was made during a long bad night for Duke. Watching him suffer just trying to breath. Yaking cough. Knowing he's only a few days away from passing. You are reading my own personal regret as a criticism of you which it was most certainly not. If I had sought more medical opinions sooner I can't help but think that Duke might have lived longer. But as to your kind suggestion that I keep my opinions to myself .... uh.... this is a public forum. But thanks for your kind support and understanding as we suffer Duke's last days. Clearly your loss did not make you sensitive to the loss suffered by others. And again to any who read this thread in the future. Collapsing trachea is a terrible illness but it turns out that there is another cause of those same symptoms. We spent way too much time focused on the trachea when it was Duke's heart condition causing the problem. It was only when the heart murmer grew loud enough that our new vet suggested an xray. That xray revealed the murmer to be more than a murmer. It was now advanced heart disease and a very enlarged heart. This was causing the yaking and trachea collapsing. This is what is now killing Duke. When I did web research on the yaking and the trachea I found absolutely no reference to any possibility of it being heart related. This cost us valuable time and it turns out not to be uncommon. Thus I am posting of Duke's illness in various web forums so that someday some other yorkie owner who is sitting at his/her computer trying to find out what is wrong with their very special pet (which as all yorkie owners know - yorkies are VERY special little beings) - might end up learning about this other cause of the yaking and insist on their vet checking out the heart. I certainly wish I would have found a reference like this in the thousands of web pages I searched. If I had - I might not be watching my dog die right now. He'd be playing ball instead. But as is all too common on web forums - posts can easily be read out of context. Someone can be in tears while posting deeply from the heart and that same post can be read by a forum member as cold and insulting. Great writers spend a lifetime perfecting the art of communicating emotion through words. I most certainly am not even a decent writer so clearly my posts are probably failing to convey the intent with which they were written. I simply hope that someday my post show's up in a suffering yorkie owners google search and that it might make a difference in that special little dogs diagnosis. |
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| | #22 |
| YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: kent england
Posts: 1,646
| my sasha went in to heart failure very quickly, she had started having fits aged about 2 but as these were not bad was not put on any meds. she would only do a little cough now and again after playing no other signs of a problem. i was told her fits were something to do with her brain and would prob not get worse. aged 12 and a half she just started having breathing probs and didnt want to lay down also her fitting got very bad to the point of having 3 or 4 a day. took her to the vets and they gave her a xray and found she had a very enlarged heart and lungs full of fluid. she was given heart meds and pills to reduce the fluid. a week later she had a heart attack, she stoped breathing and i gave her mouth to mouth and bought her back. she stayed at the vets and her meds were changed and i was told if these didnt work no more could be done. a week later she had another heart attack, i had already decided that if she stopped breathing i would not give her mouth to mouth as nothing could be done for her and she would keep on suffering, hearing your dog scream in pain is heart braking. she stopped breathing but after some time started again, i took her to the vets where they said she was suffering and nothing could be done so i had to let her go which broke my heart. im sure she had always had a heart problem and thats what had caused her fits and maybe like its already been said on here if a vet had picked this up when she was two she wouldnt of gone thought what she did. having said that tye (sashas son) who is now nearly 14 has heart failure and is doing well on the meds, hes had heart failure for a while now and is on a heart med, fluid pills and a steroid. they cough cause of the heart pushing on the windpipe and cause of fluid in the lungs, it is best not to stop the coughting completely as it helps move the fluid off the lungs. i hope everyone on here with dogs with heart problems or breathing problems the best of luck and i hope your dogs have as many happy years months or days as they can. |
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| | #23 |
| Piper & Sebastian Donating Member Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: florida
Posts: 14,495
| I'd definetly be getting a second opinion. Drugs like pain killers only mask the problems. I'd rather know what the problem is, and then work on that.
__________________ Susan, Piper ,Harley & Suiki |
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