Sunday, November 13, 2005

Blood work

To K9KidneyDiet:
Her Excellency Alexandria the Malamute just had her regular check-up. The vet was pleased, said she seemed healthy and that her blood values were pretty good, considering. I am HORRIFIED! I thought she would be getting better, not worse, with all we are doing differently now. And her awful blood values do not seem to reflect how well she seems. Allie is prancing around like a puppy, performing on drill team and eating everything in sight. She gets the homecooked chicken/veg/rice diet with some egg white, is on daily 250 ml saline. Supps: omega 3, CoQ10, B-12, B-50, MSM, parsley herb mix, calcium carbonate, digestive enzymes with probiotics. Since her electrolytes are okay, the vet says we can go to LRS if there is any reason to.
Here are Allie's current values compared with August after 6 wks abx and 2 weekend iv treatments. Is it time for another? Please let me know what I should be doing differently. Or, I guess I have to ask, am I kidding myself? At what point do we slip into denial?
As always, thank you all so much!
C, with Allie the love of my life

11/10 8/17 Ref. Range
Lipase 741 712 100-750
Total Protein 6.1 6.1 5.1-7.8
BUN 60 91 7-27
Creatinine *4.0* 3.8 0.4-1.8
Calcium 11.5 10.5 8.2-12.4
Phosphorus 4.1 6.3 2.1-6.3

Thursday, November 03, 2005

Rowan and the vet

Well, Rowan had his long-overdue 2-week (hah!) vet checkup and is doing well. The wormer worked and he is now free of his heroic case of tapes, negative on the fecal (whew!). He has gained 2 pounds and is now at 62! The vet wants to see him closer to 85-90, but concurs that we should move slowly. His bloodwork is pretty good. (Rowan's, not the vet's). He is slightly anemic and his electrolytes could be higher. I am increasing his B-12 and working on hydrating him more. The new pail should help, since he can't use it as a frisbee ;-). He'll find some creative use for it, I'm sure. Enzymes etc. are all normal. Amazing considering how emaciated he is. The vet feels that his physique and coordination will improve tons with exercise and just hanging out outside, but says not to set expectations too high and that he'll always have some trouble with things like stairs and corners because of the chondrodysplasia. His feet just aren't where he thinks they are. So no agility for our Rowan. But as he gains muscle tone, he should be able to handle regular walks, curbs and things normally. My job is to be patient with him and not push him too hard on heeling, figure-8s, etc., and always make sure hills etc. are easy for him to negotiate. And to start doing some research on chd. Rowan's eyes and ears are admirable as are his lungs and heart, and his tummy is super active and gurgly, he has to be fed several times a day, preferably three (I'll try to figure out how to do that). It's too early for his coat to have improved much. His teeth are a train wreck, so I'll have to get him used to the brush.

The vet called him a Very Pretty Dog, and every one at the clinic Ooohed and Aaaahed over him, and of course he acted like a total ham, grinning and fluttering his eyelashes at all the girls, waving his big fluffy tail like crazy and strutting around like Mr Big Stuff. He did scare the living daylights out of a teacup chihuahua when he put his snout in the thing's carrier, but those things don't count as self-respecting dogs anyway. Good think Rowan didn't inhale. He loves our vet, ran up to smooch on him this visit, basked in all the attention and squeezing. He likes riding in the car, I guess because he thinks it means we're going to go see his buddy the vet! There are a couple of guys who live up the street who are usually home when we walk by; we always visit with them, and Rowan adores being in the limelight. He really comes out of his shell when people are cooing over him. Not that he has much of a shell, Mr Friendlypants. I'll have to see if I can get him trained up for drill team -- he has such a star mentality. Or maybe I'll install a spotlight in the living room -- "Heeeere's Rowan!"