Its that time of year especially. And with what happened to us last year- I hope it helps someone.
I am hoping our experience can help someone. Had we known what we know now, it would have made things much easier not only on our dog, but us as well.
Early spring, tis the time for ticks. I have been in dogs for like 40 years, never have I seen
lyme disease, although knowing about but " certainly not one of my dogs" was the falsehood of mentality.
This post is in two parts- one what happened with us, the cause and treatment and personal notes. The second part is how this occurs, so please bear with me.
We had just lost Femka. When Zubin first showed up with depressed signs, I hate to admit this, but we put it on his grief at the loss of "his mother" as he saw her. Then went to stiffness in the neck. Having a puppy here ( Lindsey) it was totally resonable to think she bounced on his neck in the wrong position as personally witnessed several times. We took him into the vet the second day if nothing else than to get an anti-inflamatory and to have x-rays done. All x-rays showed no cracks in the neck etc, but he was obviously painful. "Rest, anti-inflamatories and pain meds and keep him quiet" was the diagnosis. ( more on that in a minute). So the treatment started. Zubin went from barely managing to severe pain within 3 days. Here is a video I took to play for the vet. It is gut wrenching to hear so a warning on that to anyone before you watch it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mr8RWnnVeusDay 4 vet said to increase pain and anti inflamatory doseage. We are both scared to bits as Femkas loss was too recent in our hearts and brain. Vet kept saying " its a strained neck muscle- this is a sighthound- you will get drama" ( I am not kidding!) Day 5 I have had it- to me Zubins pain management was not working at all. No longer believing this vet that this is just a strained muscle took to another vet.
Here we go- the second vet said the on set of
Lyme disease usually more than not does start in the neck. Its not just weakness in the limbs. He said at the onset of stiff neck in tic season it is vital to start either or both doxicycline and amoxicillian. He gave him an injection of this ( some mixture - I am not sure I am afraid as my receipt says 'doxi/amoxi injection.) and we took home after 12 hours of fluids as well.
By the next morning he went from screaming in pain to only occasional yells and within 7 days, it was gone!
The
lyme tick is so small. How the tic operates is while in a neonate it feeds off the stool spores of mice. Once the tic is infected, when it bites a dog it immediately infects the dogs. Once the tick as a full meal, it is no longer infected with the virus. It doesn't matter if your dog is on tick prevention meds or not- as once it bites the tic dies with most preventions, but the
disease has already transmitted.
Here is my advice- during early tic season, if your dog gets a stiff neck or shows pain in the neck, its a simple dose of antibiotics and I have found out since then, not all vets start this prevention right from the start.
I hope this helps someone. ( by the way- that video is mild compared to how bad it really got..).