calliecritturs
Posted : 2/21/2008 8:32:32 AM
Myra
Although I wonder why they still have a broad "autoimmune disease" listing instead of breaking it into individual diseases.
Having had a dog with IMHA (immune-mediated hemolytic anemia) I think there IS a reason for that -- simply because one auto-immune disease, **if survived**, leads often to more and more. In Billy's case it was tho his immune-system was sort of stuck 'half on' -- he went from one inflammation to another, one infection to another and another and another. It was as tho he were constantly 'sick' (ranging from vicious UTIs to a bacterial hepatitis and pancreatitis).
We've had to switch to a pretty radical, experimental homeopathic treatment to try to restore body balance to him and get his immune system actually *working* for a change. Dr. Demers told me "the immune system should be like a toggle switch -- it should come on ... do it's job and then go OFF. Billy's stays in this half-on/half-off state - never getting rid of infection or allergy but just reacting, reacting, reacting, reacting ..." We've had success so far (this is the FIRST Jan/Feb I've had him in four years where he hasn't had to be on anti-biotics to get rid of skin infections from allergies!!).
My vets have seen it over and over (both the regular and holistic vets) -- that once a dog has an auto-immune illness, very often it spirals into another 'disease' and another -- simply because the meds are difficult and can simply send infection deeper and deeper to pop up later.
So my guess would be it can be pretty difficult to name one particular auto-immune reaction -- IMHA is a biggie, but so many dogs simply 'react' -- with everything from body/head swelling to out of control infections, most of which can be called 'auto-immune' or 'immune-mediated' but nothing more specific.