calliecritturs
Posted : 9/9/2012 2:59:36 PM
sable's mom
My dog is at Tufts, has been there since wednesday. We took her there as soon as her regular vet looked at her and said "I don't know what this is". She is in ICU there, all hooked up to IVs. I've had a couple bad experiences at Angell, so I went to tufts instead. She has been on prednisone a couple of days now. Not sure what else she is on besides the antibiotics. It is all being injected or put in her IVs because she isn't eating.
If she's at Tufts she's in a good place!! Specialty hospitals can be good ... and sometimes they may not be as good this year as they were last year (it's becoming increasingly common to see big specialty vet hospitals "bought" by big corporate entitties -- and suddenly you see all the "good" vets leave and suddenly it's not a good place any more! So let me know what you hear about Angell please! Like I said, I've seen other IMHA dogs go there).
Often they are in ICU for a while -- and it's really scarey. If she's on IV then hopefully she's getting her steroids via IV (some of them they CAN do that -- and that way it bypasses the stomach). ASK THEM.
As I said in my email -- it is **critical** for YOU to know. Don't disconnect and let your Mom handle this. CALL THEM -- **YOU** need to know what she's being given. You need to know if they are changing meds or if they NEED to. It's ok for you to suggest things -- or for you to query and say "if she's not eating then how is she getting nourishment. CAN ***I*** DO ANYTHING?? Can I come in and try to syringe feed her??"
don't just assume you can't. This honestly can be life and death to her -- because most of the fatalies result from dogs that don't eat and so then they can't take the meds. Usually they won't volunteer to eat when they feel like this and a student may not have the time to do hand-feeding. ASK ASK ASK.
sable's mom
I honestly dont know if they said blood or platelets or what. The have my mother's cell phone because mine isn't working well, so my mother gets the update calls and then relays them to me and I think some of it gets lost in translation.
You will **need** to know. AS this disease progresses -- you will need to know and remember **everything** done for her in the hospital. You'll need to know which was the bigger problem -- platelets or red blood. Which began to respond first.
This disease requires more owner cooperation and help than anything I have EVER encountered. And trust me -- I've done "sick dog rescue" for YEARS. Everything from mange to cancer to renal failure and beyond. But never in my life have I encountered anything as difficult to deal with as IMHA. The worry day by day is incredible. Not just now -- you may look back on the time when she was in ICU being taken care of by others as the "easy" days for you. But you'll need to keep your head connected with what's going on so you will be able to help her when you get her back home. This disease is not short -- it can take many many many MONTHS (Billy was on the big drugs 18 months and then his actual healing BEGAN) but you can triumph over it many, many times.
sable's mom
I do wonder if her immune system has always been bad, since she had such a severe reaction to her vaccines way back when, and also that the anaplasmosis keeps rearing its ugly head.
It isn't so much that the immune system is bad -- it gets wrong-headed. It literally gets CONFUSED. I hope someone has explained to you by now that with the immune-mediated diseases the body is literally pushing the immune system SO FULL SPEED AHEAD and so "ON" that the body keeps looking for things to attack.
The immune system should go "on" and then "off". It should go "on" when an invader (like a bad bacteria) is present - it should battle and defeat that bad bacteria and then turn off. Then the body builds something called an "antibody" -- which is the body's own little DNA/genetically formed "warrior" specific to that thing it just defeated so if it ever encounters this disease again it will bring this little disease-specific warrior out to "defeat" that thing again.
But with immune-mediated stuff, sometimes the body sees those antibodies and gets confused -- the body says "oh .. that's too much LIKE that bad thing I just killed. I must kill THIS too!" and it begins to kill it's own antibodies ... and then the antibodies look a whole lot like it's own regular blood so it kills THEM too. That's an over-simplification of what happens -- but in an immune-mediated disease the body is literally killing its OWN cells.
Now somehow in some animals (and people) the immune system can be both inferior -- and confused. It's very complex -- even things like allergies are immune-related.
sable's mom
it is just so hard to see my dog sick like this and not getting better. I miss her terribly even though I visit her at least once a day.
I do understand -- my Billy was in ICU "on and off" for about five weeks (and he was 3+ hours away) -- so I'd be able to bring him home ... and he'd crash and I'd have to race him back up there ... he'd be ok for a few days and then crash again.
We eventually discovered he did NOT have tick disease at all -- his body had built antibodies TO the tick disease (which the antibodies were what presented the "faint positive" tick results) and it was actually the doxycycline itself that was causing a problem (it is often used in human medicine to *boost* the immune system). It took four weeks to get the tick panel (a honking huge tick test) back to determine he did not have tick disease and they took him off the doxycycline. SUDDENLY then his body kicked in and the immune system backed off. For some reason with Billy's consistution the push he got from the doxy was equal to the push down from the immune suppressors (and he was on a TON of immune suppressors)
If you are to a point where she is just not responding to the immune suppressors ask them to take her off the doxy for 24 hours and SEE if it makes a difference. It doesn't often happen, but if the vets feel the battle is 'lost' anyway it can be a last ditch thing to try that can be successful. They want the doxy because it's the gold standard drug to fight tick disease. But there ARE others that can be used.
Good luck!!