Heart Like a Dog

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

  • Home
  • About
  • Sampson
  • Delilah
  • Contact
  • Community Page

Is it IBD, EPI or Something Else?

July 25, 2017 By Jodi

Last week, in my post about Chronic UTI’s, I mentioned another medical issue had cropped up. During one of our visits for the UTI, my Vet noted Delilah had lost about five pounds in three or four months. She suggested I try putting some weight back on Delilah.

At the time, Delilah was weighing in at about 66 pounds. I started feeding her the same portion I feed Sampson. Which is the portion size for an 85 pound dog.

Side note: Delilah was fine with the increase in food. 😉

“Don’t give me extra food,” said no Lab ever.

During one of our calls about Delilah’s UTI’s,  I mentioned her weight, and wondered if she could have a digestive disorder, like EPI.

“How are her poops, hard or soft?”

“Soft, but I just assumed it was from the constant antibiotics.”

“Are her poops smelly?”

“Yes, but she’s been on antibiotics for basically four months!”

The vet suggested a blood test.

When the test came back, her Cobalamin and Folate (B12) levels were low. For the record, the normal for Cobalamin is 284-836, hers were 222. Folate normal is 4.8 – 19.0 and hers were 4.3.
The big surprise was…her liver level that had been high for two years, was normal.

At this point, my vet said, she probably had IBD. But I wasn’t buying it.  according to PetMD, the symptoms for IBD are:

  • Diarrhea
  • Fatigue
  • Weight Loss
  • Depression
  • Chronic Intermittent Vomiting
  • Farting (Gas)
  • Abdominal Pain
  • Abdominal Sounds
  • Red Blood in Stools
  • Distressed Coat

Of the listed symptoms, she had weight loss. Nothing else, in fact, I’m complimented ALL THE TIME, about how beautiful her coat is.

And then the vet said something horrible. She recommended a Commercial Hydrolyzed diet.

To which I said, “Absolutely not. I’m not putting her on that. I’ve read the label, and there is not one discernible ingredient in it.”

My vet gave me a lengthy explanation of how the food is broken down into the tiniest possible unit, which makes the food source undetectable to the body.

Let’s say your dog is allergic to chicken. A Hydrolyzed dog food takes that chicken, and breaks it down to the smallest possible unit. Now the body cannot detect that the food it’s ingesting is chicken, thereby allowing the dog stop having the reaction to chicken. At least this is the way I understand it.

But something my vet said, triggered a number of thoughts in my brain. (At this point, my Hubby would say, “I thought I smelled something burning.”) She said that Delilah likely had inflammation in her intestines.

I’ve done some research on dogs with IBD and what’s the best diet for them, and from what I can tell, the raw diet is highly recommended for dogs with this disease. And Delilah’s been on it for seven years, so the IBD diagnosis didn’t sit well with me.

My thoughts were this:

1) Long time readers may remember a time when Delilah had a severe allergic reaction to something.  We never did figure out what it was, I suspect it was a fish oil, but have no proof.)

Hives on dogs

It looks like a crown of hives, or a bad job of corn rowing.

2) Could any of these issues stem from being on the antibiotic for so long?

3) Sometime last year I began adding a couple of different proteins into the dogs diet. Specifically Beef and Tuna.

4) I have food allergies myself, and they manifest as inflammation. (I get hives!)

I was adamantly against the company and food recommended by my vet. My decision, after discussing thoroughly with Hubby and my vet, was to eliminate beef, tuna, dairy, and grain from her diet, as well as consulting with the Holistic vet. We decided to do this, because the symptoms Delilah was having were not severe, she didn’t appear to be sick, and the levels were only slightly off.

I had my vet’s office e-mail me Delilah’s records for the past year, which I then forwarded to the Holistic Vet. You may recall from last week’s post, that he had a plan for her chronic UTI’s.

Well, he also had a plan for the weight loss/intestinal issues. We started her on a Chinese herb called, “Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang.” Don’t ask me how to pronounce it, when I call for a refill, I ask for the Chinese brown powder. We also put the dogs on a really good Pro-biotic. (I’m a firm believer that the Gut is the Root of all evil in the body.) Throw the flora in your gut off, and it’s a crap shoot as to what can go wrong. And antibiotics can definitely throw your good bacterial levels wonky.

I also put Delilah on Cobalaquin which according to my vet, is the only Vitamin B12 that can be given orally that is actually absorbed properly.

I immediately stopped the other proteins I’d been feeding, and kept her only on chicken and turkey. These were proteins she had been having all along for the past seven years.

I’m always careful on what goes into their treats, but I really became vigilant. As I picked up poop, I noted whether it was soft, or stinky, or both. If it was either or both, I stopped feeding her that treat.

After six weeks, Delilah went in for her annual exam. I was thrilled when the bloodwork showed the Cobalamin was not a concern at that time. To be on the safe side, we kept her on the Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang and the Hydrangea & Eupatorium tincture for another six weeks.

At this point, her weight seems to be stable, and her poops appear more like her normal poops. In my opinion, Delilah had an allergy to one of the proteins I was feeding her. I’m betting on the Tuna, but just to be safe, she’s staying off Beef for now.

IF she continues to do well, I MAY consider adding some Beef back into her diet, but it won’t be for a very long time.

MEANWHILE, during Delilah’s annual exam, our vet discovered that Delilah had a Corneal Ulcer in her right eye.

Next week, I’ll share our struggle with the ulcer, her eventual diagnosis and where we go from here.

DISCLAIMER: I am not a veterinarian, I do not play one on TV, and I did not stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. If your dog is showing signs of intestinal discomfort, if (s)he’s vomiting or having diarrhea, or just not feeling well,  please take him/her to your veterinarian. The diagnosis we came to with Delilah is based on conversations and testing with a licensed veterinarian and is in no way intended to be a diagnosis for your dog. Please DO NOT SELF DIAGNOSE your dog.

Like what you read? Please share on your social network.

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest

Filed Under: Health Related Tagged With: Delilah, Health, Life With Sampson And Delilah

Treating Chronic UTI’s

July 18, 2017 By Jodi

Beginning in December, we’ve been dealing with three major health issues with Delilah. Today I am going to share with you the first issue, Chronic UTI’s, and in future posts, I will share the others. I should let you know that Delilah is okay, we are just trying to get to the bottom of this rabbit hole we jumped into.

The day after Sampson’s *hem hem* morning surprise, he was scheduled for an acupuncture appointment at our vet’s office. I came home from work, and let Delilah out, and then I let her out again, and again.

My little UTI meter went ding, ding, ding, so I grabbed my handy Dog Urine collection kit, and grabbed a sample. While the vet prefers the first sample of the morning, it is absolutely possible to determine infection with a non-morning sample.

Because no-one should start the morning with dog pee on them.

As Sampson was having his session, the vet staff ran a check on Delilah’s urine, and sure enough, she had a UTI. It was her first one since July, when she had that really awful one with blood in her urine. I went home with a two week course of antibiotic, with instructions to check her a few days after she finished. I also went home with 100 mg of Gabapentin. (Just an FYI, Gabapentin works incredibly well in helping with that frequent urge to go, which so often accompanies a UTI.)

I had just enough time (so I thought) to take Delilah for a quick walk before I had to pick my sister up from the airport. I say, “so I thought,” because I forgot to account for the time it took the Gabapentin to work, and the frequency with which my dog had to stop to ‘pee’.

At every single house. Some of them twice!

Sometimes a girl just has to go.

Eventually we made it around the block and the Gabapentin kicked in.

The recommended dosage of Gabapentin for Delilah, was one or two every 12 hours. But I found at around the 9 hour mark, Delilah was again experiencing the urge to go.

I hatched a plan, that I got approved by my vet, and that was to give Delilah one Gabapentin every  8 hours. That did the trick for her, and kept her comfortable while the antibiotic did its job.

We gave Delilah the antibiotic as directed and checked her about four days after she finished the antibiotics, and she had a UTI. Grrr….

So began our four month struggle with UTI’s.

I’m not kidding, this poor dog was on an antibiotic for most of four full months. My vet would take the sample, check it, send it out to find out what antibiotic would work best for it. We would follow the instructions to the letter, and retest, and either she would STILL have the UTI, or it would be gone, but then she would have another one in a couple of days.

After doing this dance two or three times, my vet suggested Delilah be checked for bladder stones. I was also concerned about Cancer, but the Vet thought that was unlikely. So we scheduled an ultra-sound and she spent the day at the vet, and nothing showed up.

My vet’s next thought that the sphincter muscle between the bladder and the urethra was weak, she recommended stopping the Vetriscience Bladder Strength, which had worked amazingly well for almost two years, and switching her to a prescription estrogen. It was recommended the UTI be cleared up before we started the Incurin, but that proved to be close to impossible.

So, towards the end of one course of antibiotics, we switched her to Incurin. And the infections kept coming.

The next thought (by my vet) was that she had Cushing’s disease.

To which I emphatically said, “She does not present as a Cushings dog.”

Finally, at my wits end with traditional medicine, I called the Holistic Vet.

Since I just started a new job, I didn’t have the time to take off to drive her to his office, which is over an hour away. Luckily for me, he knows the dogs, and agreed to consult with us electronically. I forwarded all Delilah’s records to his office.

We started with records from June of 2016 because that was her annual check-up, and with the exception of the slightly elevated liver levels, she was in good health.

Dr. Landau put her on a Chinese Herb called, “Bu Zhong Yi Qi Tang,” which is designed to help her immune system clear infection in the bladder, and tincture, called, “Hydrangea and Eupatorium,” which replaced the Gabapentin and treated the symptoms of the UTI.

Additionally, I added ½ tsp of D-Mannose powder at each meal, and I stopped the Crananadin we were using, and switched to a straight cranberry pill. Because Sampson has had UTI’s also, I added the Cranberry, and D-Mannose powder to his diet as well.

Cranberry’s have an ingredient, A-type proanthocyanidin which helps to keep the bacteria from attaching itself to the walls of the bladder. D-Mannose has the same affect.  **Source, Prevention.Com** (You can read more about preventing UTI’s (in dogs and humans!) HERE.

When she went for her annual check-up the beginning of June, we checked her urine, and it was infection free. She just finished up the last of her tincture, and her latest voided urine sample was clean.

The problem is, we really don’t know what the underlying cause of the UTI’s is/was. Which means, I watch her very carefully.

During one of our visits to the vet, it was noted that Delilah had lost almost five pounds since September, which started us down another rabbit hole.

Thankfully, (I feel funny saying thankfully here) the weight loss coincided with her UTI, so this was another thing I brought to Dr. Landau’s attention, and in another post, I’ll tell you how we are treating this, and what it could be.

DISCLAIMER: I am not a veterinarian, I do not play one on TV, and I did not stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. If your dog is showing signs of Urinary Tract Infections, or struggles to urinate, please take him/her to your veterinarian. The diagnosis we came to with Delilah is based on conversations and testing with a licensed veterinarian and is in no way intended to be a diagnosis for your dog. Please DO NOT SELF DIAGNOSE your dog.

Like what you read? Please share on your social network.

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest

Filed Under: Health Related Tagged With: Delilah, Health, Labrador Retriever

Caption This Photo

July 9, 2017 By Jodi

Every Labrador Retriever I’ve ever met, has been motivated by food. Like all dogs, some are more motivated by others.

Sampson is only part Labrador Retriever, so while he’s motivated for food, he’s never been one to go into the garbage, destroy used napkins or paper towels that had food on them, run off on a walk to eat bird seed from the neighbor’s yard, counter surf (except for when he was a puppy and went for the butter, and filet mignon, but who could really blame him for that? Not me.)

Unlike a certain Labrador Retriever who has done all of the above, and then some.

Honestly, her exploits are what legends are made of. Every self-respecting Labrador should aspire to eat at least half of what she has.

Okay, so I gave you the background, now here’s the task. While I was searching for a photo for today’s post, I came across this photo.

Now, I already have a caption in mind, but I want to hear what you think, and how you’d caption the photo. And just for a little background, that container she’s holding is what stores their raw food in the refrigerator. I had used the last of the food up, and stuck the container in the sink to wash it. Delilah took it OUT of the sink, and decided to wash it her way.

True story.

I have a friend, who met her current husband in a bar. It went down like this.

My friend Charlotte was visiting from Chicago. So the Hubs and I decided to take her out to our favorite bar for a drink. Hubs was shooting pool, so Char and I sat at the bar. The TV was on, but you couldn’t hear the sound, SO…I supplied the dialogue. But in a funny kind of way, because I like to make things funny. Well, there was a guy at the bar, and he was listening in, and we all were laughing, and the next thing I knew, I was standing up for them at their wedding.

What can I say? I like this kind of stuff….and I thought it might be fun to include you guys in it.

Sound like fun? Good.

Captioning contest will end Saturday, July 15, 2017 at 3:00 pm Eastern Standard Time, and I’ll announce the winner either Sunday the 16th, or Tuesday the 18th.

Oh and to make this a bit more fun, SO…The person who has what I consider the best caption, will receive a $15 Amazon card.

And go!

 

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Like what you read? Please share on your social network.

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest

Filed Under: Humor, Uncategorized Tagged With: Contests, Delilah, Humor

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • …
  • 261
  • Next Page »

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!

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Let’s Stay Connected!

  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Heart Like A Dog

Heart Like A Dog

Products We Love

Heart Like a Dog reader's receive a one time 25% discount when purchasing. If you do purchase, we thank you as we receive a small commission. Use code HeartOff

Creative Commons

Creative Commons License
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.

Recent Posts

  • Dearest Delilah
  • Happy 17th Birthday in Heaven, Sampson
  • My Darling Delilah
  • A Year Without You
  • Six Months of Missing You

Recent Comments

  • Madison on Dearest Delilah
  • Ducky & Bogie's Mom on Dearest Delilah
  • Sue on Dearest Delilah
  • Brian Frum on Dearest Delilah
  • Cat and DOG Chat With Caren on Dearest Delilah

Copyright © 2025 · Dynamik Website Builder on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in