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Ellie's vet would only take urine via cysto when sending for culture. Een at Ellie's check-up when she had a U/A, it was taken cysto (my choice). I think either way is okay for most things but with all the cystos Ellie has had (probably at least 3 or 4), I don't think there has ever been an issue with blood... I guess doing it free catch first and then doing a cysto if there is a problem is fair. |
Crystal, same with my vet...They always take it cysto for culture. I usually prefer they do it this way anyway. I don't think the BUN is considered HIGH, but it is very high normal so should definitely be watched, and in my opinion, support should be given. |
Good...ish news!! After racing Bella round and round the living room and playing lots of fetch and walking her (so she'd be thirsty and drink!), I brought Bella back up to work last night to take another look at her bladder. This time is WAS full!!!! AND, NO STONES!!!! Hooray! I took another look at her kidneys and they were the same. Afterward, I took her right into my bathroom at work, put a pad down and proceeded to do a test run on catching her urine! It worked! However, this morning was a whole different story.....I sat with her for over an hour trying to get her to go, and when she did she cut it off as soon as I tried to catch (she only got maybe 1/2 tsp out before she stopped and most of that was on the pad :rolleyes:). So I called the vet and asked if we could just to a cysto and they said to bring her on in....I wanted to do it before she had a chance to pee out that first morning urine!! I just got the urinalysis results faxed to me, and here they are: Glucose--Negative Bilirubin--Negative Ketone--Negative Blood--3+ (whatever that means?) pH--6 Protein--Trace Urobilinogen--Normal Nitrite--Negative Leukocytes--Negative Specific Gravity--1020 Then it says this: Sedementation: Positive: Negative: Bacteria +++ Crystals - WBC + RBC + Immediately, I'm just glad she was negative for crystals!!! Yay! But it looks to me like she has a UTI, so I called to discuss it with Dr. Pitts. I'll have to call back in ~1 hr. because he's out. Just wanted you to know....I'll let you know when I talk to him...I'm thinking she may need an antibiotic, and I wanted her to get it now instead of in a week when we get back! |
Finally switching vets.... We have an appointment on Wed. the 3rd to consult another vet here in town....the vet I'd been using (Dr. Pitts) just wasn't cutting it and neither was his colleague :( I basically had to drag an interpretation of the urinalysis out of them and then ask for an antibiotic to treat the UTI!!! :mad: Then, they gave me a liquid (Clovomax I think??). I tried it on Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning, but 2/3 of it ended up on the hair on her face instead of in her mouth where it could do some good. Since we were out of town at that point, I ended up taking her, her lab work results (all of them), and the antibiotic to a local vet and waiting for an hour to be seen. He seemed surprised they would give her a liquid (given her long hair) and gave me a chewable (Baytril) to replace it since I told him how good she was at chewing up her meds. ALREADY her UTI is better, I can tell!! VERY light colored and non-smelling urine...Yay!! So, the vet I'm consulting on Wed. is a holistic vet. I'm going to ask for a Protein C test that day as well as catch her up on everything so far. I also have an email in to Dr. Wakshlag (Cornell nutritionist) and am eagerly awaiting a response. Hopefully he will be able to help me figure out a home-cooking diet for Bella and consult with the new vet if need be. I'm getting very tired of soaking her kibble in water and then mixing it with yogurt or something so she'll eat it. Plus it makes me sad because I know she doesn't like it very much, and I'm pretty sure she's been getting hungry even with eating all 4 meals a day :( I upped the amount I've been giving her by just a bit because I can't stand to see her hungry....especially since she is not overweight and still hasn't shown any symptoms. I'm also hoping I can give Dr. Wakshlag a couple of treat recipes that I've found that he can possibly modify so they will be ok for her, or maybe he can give me a recipe himself that would be good. My baby likes treats, and I'm sad that there doesn't seem to be anything that's ok to give her!! Thanks everyone for your support, and I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving!! |
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You had to ask for the UTI to be treated???:eek: I think I'd be finding a different vet also. |
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I'm so hoping this holistic vet will be a good alternative...I'm not used to a vet like the one I've been seeing. My previous vet (in another town) was always so caring, concerned, and informative! *sigh |
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$18 sounds very reasonable for MI. |
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That is so ridiculous that you had to ask your vet for antibiotics!! I'm glad you switched vets. It seems like the new one listens and is much more cooperative. |
I just have to pop in with this...did you know that improper extraction of blood can lead to skewed results? |
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The bile acid test is very reliable but the red blood cells MUST be separated from plasma (the clear part of blood) before they are sent to lab for analysis (centrifuged or spun to allow plasma separation from blood cells). Results can be falsely abnormal if the bile acid samples are lipemic (lots of fat IF the fat is not adequately removed by the laboratory analyzing the sample) or if hemolysis (burst red blood cells, makes the plasma red) occurs. The red color interferes with the color of the end point dye in the bile acid test. A clinician can tell if the sample is hemolyzed when they centrifuge the sample to separate the red blood cells from the plasma. If it is hemolyzed they should collect another sample. Drawing blood with a vacutainer needle into a vacutainer (suction of the tube facilitates the collection) may be too traumatic for some red blood cells augmenting hemolysis. Using a syringe and needle or syringe and butterfly needle appears to collect the best samples. After the blood is collected, the needle should be removed from the syringe and the top removed from the vacutainer so that the blood may be gently transferred to the vial. Results of the bile acid test should state if the samples were lipemic or if hemolysis occurred. PSVA and MVD Research Summary |
It should say at the bottom of the report if hemolysis occurred. Your vet should have told you if this happened, but I understand that sometimes they don't.. |
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I know her ALT is super high, buuuut the vet I saw out of town said that it is normally quite high in puppies and he wouldn't have been worried about it either if no other numbers were abnormal. I know ALT is commonly very high in human infants too, so it would stand to reason that it would be high in puppies too.......the info I read said that an infant's ALT will start normalizing as he/she approaches 1 yr. of age. Any thoughts on that?? Quote:
As for the vet, I did like the one I saw where my family lives, but Bella has an appointment on Wed. to see another vet here in town for a consult. She is an holistic vet, and I've heard really good things about her....I'm hoping she is MUCH better (it would be very hard not to be though!!) |
From the "Liver disease" thread: Quote:
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In addition..... I remember reading that "chicken fat" listed as an ingredient is totally different in terms of allergies anyway than chicken or chicken meal. I believe I read someone say that dogs are normally allergic to the protein but that the chicken fat wouldn't cause an allergy if the dog were allergic to chicken. Is that right?? The reason I ask is that I have been wondering if I could boil chicken and then use the "broth" to soak her kibble in instead of just plain water?? I think the water would take on the taste of the chicken and might make it more appealing to her? (I of course wouldn't give her the chicken.) In addition to apple bits and watermelon, I have been occasionally giving her a cucumber bit.....is cucumber ok? She LOVES it! I didn't think this one would be bad, but I wanted to check. She also loves green beans, so I'm planning to have some of those ready too for a snack. I've talked to someone about oats being high in purines (I think??), so are those a no-no because of her ALT or because of her BUN? She loves dry cereal (I have given her a rice chex before, but they contain sugar, etc... so I'll need to find something else.....maybe a kashi product--they have pretty limited ingredients) so I'd love to be able to have something like that she could have. Also, is celery bad? I've never tried it, so I don't know if she'd like it, but I know it's basically like eating water for humans, so I wondered if it would be ok to try with her?? |
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As for all of this purine stuff, it may be good to pay attention to it but I just don't with Ellie persay. We mostly watch the protein and still aren't clinical with that because she seems to be okay and nobody involved in her care has been concerned about low purines. This is definately something I'd look into if she because symptomatic. Is Bella allergic to chicken? Is that why you are avoiding it or is it because you don't want her liver to have to process it? I had read that same thing about chicken fat not causing allergy issues but haven't confirmed. |
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