Heart Like a Dog

The Good, the Bad, and the Oh My God of living with dogs!

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You Make Me Smile – February 7, 2016

February 7, 2016 By Jodi

You make me smile (or laugh), the sweet, funny, loving things my dogs do on a daily basis, that brings a smile to my face, or a laugh to my lips.

Sampson, the way you refuse to ring the doorbell to come in, yet rush to get a treat when Delilah rings it…

Golden Labrador

You make me smile.

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Filed Under: You Make Me Smile Tagged With: Life With Sampson And Delilah, You Make Me Smile

Follow-Up Friday – February 5, 2016

February 5, 2016 By Jodi

Welcome to this week’s edition of Follow-Up Friday, the post where I highlight reader’s comments, answer questions and generally just wrap up my week.

You Make Me Laugh – January 31, 2016

Chocolate Labrador

Dennis L. Havlin (Sandy Says) said, “Hi Jodi – LOL – the paw placement looks painful! another good post – ”

Bah ha ha, I never even noticed WHERE her paw was!

All Things Collie said, “Absolutely! And especially the back of the sofa. They just don’t realize how big they are! Lol. Are you on Instagram? ”

Mine do NOT go on the back of the sofa, but I think that’s mostly because she hasn’t thought of it. 😉 Yes, we are on Instagram, you can use the icons in the sideboard to connect with us via our social media accounts. Or search for Heartlikeadog

Cupcake said, “That looks like the perfect spot to be, D. I walk right over the arm of the sofa and onto the end tables. Sometimes I walk off the chair onto the coffee table. I walk around on tables as if they’re the floor.”

Now THAT would bother me, I can’t stand cats on the tables or counters either. 🙂

Jan K said, “Cricket and Luke like to lay on top of the couch to look out the windows, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen them sitting on the arm. Cricket will also often walk across the top of the couch or futon just like a cat.”

Wow, I wonder if mine are just too big, or never thought of it? 

Training Confessions

Chocolate Labrador

Lauren Miller said, “I’m also trying to get more organized and I’d really like to get a white board calendar type thing so I can write down who is learning what. I also call my dogs assholes sometimes, too.”

We don’t trick train like you do, so I don’t need that kind of organization, but I should make a list of commands…just so I remember them. (And I’m glad I’m not the only one who calls my dogs assholes.) 🙂

Cupcake said, “Sometimes Mom calls me Frankie. Nope. There’s no rhyme or reason. She never had a dog named Frankie and doesn’t even know a human Frankie. But she says, “Come on, Frankie.” ….I come because I feel sorry for her. And in my mind, I call her Frankie, too. 🙂

Cupcake, you made me laugh on that one. One day I called Sampson, Bruce. No idea why. Never had a dog named Bruce, it just came out. But I love that you call your mom Frankie. 🙂

Emma said, “Some people really enjoy training and that is great, but Mom doesn’t really enjoy it. Our training is saved for our sports.

I’m with Mom on that one. I like my guys to know basic obedience, but personally, I’d much rather hit an agility course or tricks class. 

Jan K said, “I know what you mean about being inconsistent with the cues, but honestly I’m not sure it always matters. Luke really doesn’t respond to the words as much as he does to my gestures, or just knowing what it is I want.”

I get that. It’s not so much what I say, but it’s if they respond. I think it’s great that Luke responds to gestures.

Sue said, ““Black beans!” LOL It’s funny. I hardly swear at all any more because my dogs hate it. Even if I whisper “sh*t” the dogs come to comfort me in my obvious-to-them anguish :-)”

I know, it made me laugh too. Ever since Sampson started getting funky with sounds, he’s been super sensitive. At night when I go to shut off the light, if I turn wrong, or cuss, he moves. 

Your pups are sensitive to your moods. 😉

Callie, Shadow and Ducky’s mom said, “Don’t feel bad, Jodi. I got my Dog Obedience Training Instructor certificate from Animal Behavior College, and I still can’t train my dogs to fetch, come, or stay with any real consistency.”

Bah ha ha. I don’t feel badly, but maybe you’d be more successful if you used the training on the two-legged animal in your house. 😉

Cascadian Nomads Bethany Clochard said, “Is it really going to make you feel better to know that I also am guilty of all four of these things? Or, is it that we get to tell our dogs, “you are not alone in your confused by stupid humans misery?””

LOL probably not, but I do feel badly for my dogs, especially if I get frustrated with them.

Daschund Nola said, “I swear all the time, too! “Move it/get out the way” has turned into “for fuck’s sake, move your ass!”. :p”

YOU are a woman after my own heart. I can’t tell you how much I love this. 

Elaine said, “Lol! Yep…I can relate to some of these. It’s a good thing our pups don’t take “Oh, Shit!” literally. :-)”

OMG can you imagine? LOL

Pandora’s Box – Barks and Bytes

You can see the spot just above his knee where they shaved him for the Ultrasound.

You can see the spot just above his knee where they shaved him for the Ultrasound.

Taryn asked, “Can’t a heart murmur be nothing at all as well? I know my doctor found one in me at a physical a few years back. She sent me to a cardiologist and he was like, “Meh, do big deal…..a third of the population has them…..” He didn’t make me do anything about it….Good Luck through all this. I do know how it feels. With Wilson heading to 13 soon, I’m always waiting for something, I don’t know what, but something.”

Emma said, “What we don’t understand is why there has to be something going on to cause the heart murmur. Katie has one now, had a couple simple tests done and our vet said it is totally normal in senior dogs. Nothing to worry about, and if it progresses past stage 1, she can get some meds to regulate it. We don’t know why Sampson’s would be different.”

To answer both of these questions, I don’t think it’s the heart murmur that’s the concern. As Taryn said, a good many people have heart murmurs. I think the concern is the irregular heartbeat without knowing what’s causing it. 

The way the vet explained it to me is one part of the heart beats and then it tells the other part of the heart to beat. When the heartbeat is irregular one part of the heart is actually doing its job twice, without letting the other part work.

One of the vets said to me, “Could it be something inside the heart that eventually dies off and the irregular heartbeat stops? Yes, I’ve seen that happen.” 

But until they know why, they are hesitant to put him under anesthesia because he could die.

2 Brown Dawgs asked, “Could it be age related? ”

That is my initial thought, as the irregularity is very minor. When the vet checked him last, she listened to his heart for one to two minutes and only heard that irregularity once. Still, I don’t want to risk it in case it’s something serious.

Jan K asked, “Can Sampson’s ACL tear heal with management…or is that what you tried before?”

We did try that before and it did work, BUT we made the mistake of giving him too much freedom too soon. For right now, the only option we have is conservatively managing it. Once we know what’s going on with the adrenal, we can begin working on alternative ways to help him manage the ACL.

All Things Collie asked, “How old is he? Because with seniors, that’s always a consideration before choosing surgery.”

He is 11 1/2, he will be 12 in July. We did discuss his age and my vet felt comfortable with the anesthesia, until the irregular heartbeat showed up.

Sue said, “I really hate to break it to you, but Sampson has been sending us money to buy lottery tickets for years, Jodi 😉”

Son of a bitch, that’s where my coffee money went. And I was blaming Hubby. 🙂 

Alexa88 said, “although its hard as hell try to keep your mind on the usual daily stuff that goes on with you an the dogs. and instead of worry every time you look at them let your heart fill up with the peace, joy, and love that flows between you and them… not scolding but just remember that our pets pick up on our moods.”

Thank you Alexa, I am trying to fill my heart with those things, but you should also feel free to scold me if the need arises. 🙂

DZ Dogs asked, “Have you looked into non surgical ACL repairs?” and provided a link to non-surgical ACL repairs.

For now I feel like this is our only option and we did do it before with moderate success. Thank you for sharing that link. I checked it out and thankfully we are already doing a good many of the suggested protocols. Once we know what we are dealing with regarding the adrenal, I’ll check into getting some of the other recommended treatments in place.

Well that’s it for me folks, hug and kiss your babies and have a wonderful weekend.

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Pandora’s Box – Barks and Bytes

February 4, 2016 By Jodi

I don’t know about you, but when something happens health wise either with me or the dogs, I usually have a bunch of questions. Once I get those answered I like to mull over the issue (similar to the way most people sip wine), then I form my thoughts of how I think I’d like to proceed. Once that’s done, I feel out a couple of other people.

As most of you know Sampson went in for routine tooth removal on the 19th of January and they discovered an irregular heart beat as well as a heart murmur. Since he was already at the vet he had a chest x-ray and the heart looked normal, so the next thing they suggested was an Ultrasound of his heart, which was also normal.

Golden Labrador Retriever

Another visit to the vet? I love them and all, but this is getting ridiculous. Just as ridiculous as a dog wearing boots.

The Dr. performing the Ultrasound said the next cause of these types of irregular heart beats is tumors on the liver or spleen. My vet called and asked if they could Ultrasound those as well and I said of course. (In for a penny, in for a pound, right?)  There were no tumors/masses on the liver or spleen, which was good news. BUT  they did find a very tiny nodule on one of one of his Adrenal glands.  When discussing this with another vet, I said, I’m just relieved she didn’t say mass and the vet said, yes it is a mass.  Way to lure me into feeling okay about this.

My vet thought it possible that Sampson might have Cushing’s disease and asked if she could run a blood test, which came back normal. She then suggested a urine test to check for dilution. I was pretty adamant that he didn’t have Cushing’s having already consulted Dr. Google, but I used my Ninja pee skills and dropped off a sample.

I was shocked when the vet called and said his urine was diluted. The next thing she said, was we should put him through the test for Cushing’s Disease. And that’s where I drew the line. My thought process was this,  he has no symptoms of Cushing’s, so why would I make him spend another full, stressful day at the vet’s office?

I put in a call to one of the owner’s of the practice who tends to lean towards the Holistic approach and asked him to call me to discuss it.

He opened the conversation with, “Welcome to Pandora’s box”. Which in layman’s terms means, we’ve ruled out a good portion of what Sampson DOESN’T have, but we still don’t know WHAT, if anything, he does have.

So we talked about the Cushing’s test and he had an alternative suggestion. There is a urine test (fairly new, currently only run at a laboratory in Wisconsin) which tests the levels of cortisol and creatine and it can rule out Cushing’s.

The way it was explained to me is thus, the test can do one of two things, it can tell you the dog DOESN’T have Cushing’s Disease, but it cannot tell you if the dog has it. Savvy?

The urine test was about $102 vs approximately $300 for all-day-at-the-vet to test for Cushing’s Disease. For me it was a no brainer. Put my dog through a stressful test, or utilize my pee ninja skills again? *Note here, it was not about the money, because I would spend the $300 IF I thought he had Cushing’s, but my Spidey senses were saying  NO.*

So Thursday night I picked up the dog’s water bowl around 8:00 in the hopes of making sure Sampson’s urine was good and concentrated. His first pee of the day was at 8:45 Friday morning and it looked nice and dark to me, but I dropped it off anyway.

The vet called on Tuesday and said “As you suspected, he does not have Cushing’s.” Well…she said there’s always a small chance, like the odds of him getting struck by lightening or winning the lottery. Which would be really rare, since he’s never played the lottery as long as I’ve known him.

I feel fairly confident in saying, we’ve ruled out Cushing’s Disease, but we need to monitor that little adrenal.  The vet was comfortable waiting a couple of months, but not me. I’d rather err on the side of caution (and Hubby agrees with me) so we plan on having it rechecked either the 17th or 24th of this month, depending on what the Ultrasound Dr. says.

The vet and I talked about what could be going on with that adrenal and it could be a benign little nothing that could have been there for a while, or it could be something really sinister. She spelled it for me and then the next words out of her mouth were, “I really regret spelling that for you just now, because I know you’re going to go on the internet.”

They know me SO well.

She then asked me to please not go searching around on the internet and I told her I wouldn’t. And I’m not.

In the meantime, he still has a partial ACL tear on his other leg and they can’t do surgery on him because they don’t know why he has the irregular heart beat. I’m not sure I WANT to do surgery on him to begin with, because he was one of those dogs that just never recovered well from it. Whether that was just the way Sampson is built or the surgery itself, we don’t know. The Vet says it doesn’t hurt to do a consultation with a surgeon just to see what they say as they have methods of working on high risk dogs that the typical vet doesn’t, but right now, he’s just so wiped out, I don’t have the heart to put him through it.

You can see the spot just above his knee where they shaved him for the Ultrasound.

You can see the spot just above his knee where they shaved him for the Ultrasound.

So for now, we are limiting him to two, five to seven minute very slow walks just to get him outside the yard to potty.

If the next Ultrasound shows no change with the adrenal, we’ll more than likely make an appointment to see a surgeon, if there are changes in the adrenal…well, we’ll cross that bridge when we get there.

Right now, I just feel really helpless and heartbroken for poor Sampson.

Heart Like a Dog

Welcome to Thursday’s Barks and Bytes Blog hop hosted by 2 Brown Dawgs and Heart Like a Dog. We hope you will grab a badge from one of our websites and join us.



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About Jodi

jodiHi, my name is Jodi. Thanks for stopping by and checking out my blog! I have all kinds of fun writing about my two crazy pups, Sampson and Delilah. Find out more!

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Heart Like A Dog by Jodi E. Stone is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at www.heartlikeadog.com.

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