calliecritturs
Posted : 8/1/2009 11:38:19 AM
bdbull
My main concern with the supplements is overdosing or giving supplements that should not be given with her existing meds. We are scheduled to see her internal medicine specialist this week and will try to get an appointment with a vet who can give us more info concerning her hips.
Tell us what specific meds the dog is on first of all -- and just like with humans, high blood pressure medicine is not without its own side effects.
I would *definitely* have bloodwork sent to Dr. Jean Dodds at Hemopet ( http://www.hemopet.com ) for thyroid and SHE will consult with your vets (and I'd copy **everyone** on the results) -- she will do a breed-specific thyroid test, plus just go ahead and have the whole panel done - it's only like $20 more. Then let her discuss with the other vets about the thyroid results. Hyperthyroid and hypertension AND The kidneys are all soooooo very related and when you get a vet who is a specialist in *one* of those the others can be overlooked, particularly if no one has done breed-specific thyroid testing. If the thyroid is high but isn't being caught, then treating the thyroid can diminish the need for the hypertension meds.
Adequan and Cosequin are both really good meds -- they are literally the pharmaceutical version of glucosamine/chondroitin but are highly refined. But at the same time, the fact that they are pharmaceutical can also put a ceiling on how "much" can be given safely.
If it were me I'd have the dog on Knox NutraJoint -- it's not a pain med, nor is it g/c - it is simply gelatin (bovine cartilage) and calcium which will help the body rebuild some of the cartilage that has been lost to the process of deterioration.
I also doubt that the hips were worsened in a 3 hour period. It was likely an event that simply injured already failing tissue. But I would tell you the BEST initial help for that is going to be acupuncture. That's only constructive -- it helps healing, and it can seriously help the high blood pressure.
The University of Florida at Gainesville TEACHES acupuncture and Chinese herbals and that link I gave you is one your vet may want to explore. If they look at the faculty of the Chi Institute, they are going to find names they recognize, like Dr. Roger Clemmons (who is known all over the world for his work on Wobblers and DM, and neurosurgery). But those vets deliberately make themselves available to other vets for help in cases like this.
But I'd start with the thyroid testing -- if the thyroid isn't functioning it throws everything in the body off -- and just a regular blood panel ... even a thyroid one ... is NOT going to catch most borderline stuff. But "borderline" hyperthyroid would be a big huge deal and it might increase quality of life enormously for your dog.