MAGGIE: the dog who changed my life

MAGGIE: the dog who changed my life
Click photo to visit dawnkairns.com
Showing posts with label Colorado State University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado State University. Show all posts

Friday, June 19, 2009

Advocate for Your Pet: Misdiagnosis Happens!

Let me start by saying that my dog, Maddie, is the picture of health, except for some environmental allergies that manifest as itching. But in the past seven months Maddie was misdiagnosed twice with two different serious health problems, by two different well-meaning veterinarians.

Maddie's allergies were bad last summer and fall, and I was trying to avoid giving her Prednisone. In addition to diet changes, I took her to the Dermatology department at Colorado State University and reluctantly began Maddie on allergy shots, which I gave under the skin in the back of her neck.

Now one lesson I learned the hard way with Maggie, our previous black lab, was to always bring my intuition to the table when obtaining the advice of an expert, such as a veterinarian, regarding her health. With each allergy injection I gave Maddie, I noticed my incongruence. I didn't feel this was the way for her. But I wasn't sure what else to do right then.

About one month into the allergy injection regime, Maddie barked one day and immediately screamed in pain. I was shocked and frightened. I thought she must have a stick lodged in the back of her throat, or an infected tooth. I also noticed her hesitancy to yawn fully. To our vet we went, a man I really like. When I explained her symptoms, he nodded, told me I wouldn't like what he was about to do, and opened Maddie's mouth wide. Of course, she wailed, and I held her close to comfort her.

"Maddie has immune-mediated masticular myositis, an inflammation in the muscles of the jaw that go up into her head," he told us apologetically. "That's why opening her mouth is so painful. Her response to my opening her mouth is classic for this disease. We can also do a blood test which will be positive if she has it."

I ached to hear this. "How do you treat it? Will it return?" I asked anxiously.

"With massive doses of prednisone, tapering over 6 months." Her best chance to be out of pain was to get the inflammation down. Our vet wouldn't say it would definitely return even if brought under control, but indicated it sure was a likely possibility, and I knew chances were it would if it were truly an immune-mediated disease.

He knew how I'd resisted treating Maddie's allergies with Prednisone, and how much I'd hate this treatment plan. But I couldn't let her be in pain.

"Is there any chance this was brought on by the allergy shots?" My feeling was that this is what had precipitated this "attack" on Maddie's muscles.

"No," he said without a trace of doubt.

My gut told me otherwise. My gut knew we needed to stop the allergy injections. We left with the dreaded Prednisone & began it immediately. I also made an appointment with another vet who does an energy treatment called Bicom, and left for Texas soon after Maddie was treated. This vet did think, as I did, that it was likely that Maddie's myositis was due to the allergy injections.

The bottom line is that Maddie was only on Prednisone for 12 days in total, including the wean. I threw the injection vials in the garabage & Maddie never received another shot. (I never heard back from CSU when I left a message in the Dermatology department asking if this reaction ever occurred with allergy injections). I believe the Bicom helped Maddie's allergies and her rapid healing from the myositis tremendously, (the climate change helped alleviate her itching, too).

Oh, and Maddie's test for immune mediated masticular myositis came back negative.

Please don't think I'm advocating to not give your dog allergy injections. They do work for some dogs, and most dogs will probably never have the reaction Maddie did. What I am encouraging is that you tune in to your intuition regarding your own pets, and whether a diagnosis and/or treatment feels right to you for that pet at that point in time.

Life continues to show me with my animals how important it is to advocate for our pets with their veterinarians, especially when our gut tell us something different is happening. Our animals can't talk, which makes a veterinarian's job tough. Vets are human, and we need to keep in mind that our close bond with our animals may allow for information to pass between us at a sixth sense level that the vet may not have access to. If a diagnosis regarding your pet doesn't make sense or feel right to you, don't hesitate to speak up and ask questions. Let your vet be yours and your animal's partner in health, while you remain your animal's top advocate. Remember, no one knows your precious animal souls like you do!

Stay tuned for Maddie misdiagnosis #2 in an upcoming blog post.


Posted By:

Dawn Kairns
Author of MAGGIE: the dog who changed my life
www.dawnkairns.com
www.maggiethedogwhochangedmylife.blogspot.com
www.twitter.com/themaggiebook

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Morris Animal Foundation Works to Beat Canine Cancer

Maggie, my exuberant black lab, (in MAGGIE: the dog who changed my life) had her joyous life end much sooner than I ever dreamed she would. She was not quite 11, and was still full of energy and life when thyroid cancer cut our precious time together and her life way too short. According to the Morris Animal Foundation (MAF), cancer is the No. 1 cause of death in dogs over the age of 2. One in four dogs will die of cancer. How sad! Today I decided to feature MAF on my blog because they have "launched an unprecedented $30 million effort to cure canine cancer within a dog's lifetime – the next 10 to 20 years." I'd like to invite readers to please support them in this incredible effort.

From Morris Animal Foundation Website
(Canine Cancer Campaign Fact Sheet)

" ... Morris Animal Foundation has World–renowned veterinary scientists and cancer specialists agree that this MAF–led effort will not only save countless dogs from suffering and premature death, but should also help produce breakthroughs in the prevention, treatment, and cures of human cancers – in particular childhood cancers."
http://www.morrisanimalfoundation.org/special-campaigns/ccc/

"Morris Animal Foundation launched the Canine Cancer Campaign with the goal of preventing and curing canine cancer, while also finding treatments for dogs suffering from the disease now. At the heart of the campaign is a commitment to the highest research standards, so we can launch a focused and strategic effort to end the great suffering that cancer creates for dogs and the families who love them.

MAF Campaign Goals:

•Provide new treatments for dogs currently suffering from cancer
•Establish a high-quality tumor sample bank that can be used by cancer researchers
•Develop prevention strategies so this disease might one day be eliminated or, at the very least, drastically reduced in incidence and severity
•Train new researchers who will work to find preventions, treatments and the ultimate cures

Highlights:

New Treatments: Numerous veterinary institutions are collaborating and conducting clinical trials with the purpose of developing improved cancer therapies for dogs. The first clinical trial has entered phase two and is looking at a promising drug to fight bone cancer (osteosarcoma). This clinical trial is coordinated by the National Cancer Institute’s Comparative Oncology Trials Consortium. We are poised to fund other multidisciplinary clinical trials if scientists identify treatments that look promising for helping dogs.

Tumor Sample Bank: Tumor tissue samples that originate from animals with thorough histories involving the age, breed, response to therapy and length of remission will help scientists determine why one dog with a specific cancer responds to therapy and another does not. The Pfizer-CCOGC Biospecimen Repository was established in 2007 with initial funding from MAF, Pfizer Animal Health and the American Kennel Club Canine Health Foundation. This project is overseen by the Canine Comparative Oncology and Genomics Consortium. The three-year goal is to populate the bank with at least 3,000 samples of the most common canine cancers.

Prevention: A panel of canine cancer experts helped us prioritize research into prevention strategies using genomic and epidemiologic approaches. Only through such critical long-term studies can scientists define all the genetic, nutritional and environmental risk factors for canine cancer. The first prevention study, at Colorado State University, is under way and will analyze cancer susceptibility in golden retrievers, of which an estimated 60 percent die of cancer. MAF recently received a financial pledge for funding a large-scale, longitudinal prevention study with multiple breeds and is working on the project plan. The Golden Retriever Foundation has also graciously pledged to fund innovative strategies to prevent cancer in that breed.

Training: Training new cancer researchers is critical to curing cancer. The Animal Cancer Center Cancer Biology Program, established at Colorado State University through MAF funding, is now in its fourth year of training students who plan to become scientists. With the support of MAF funding, the University of Minnesota will soon launch a similar program."

Please donate to the Morris Animal Foundation to help cure canine cancer: https://www.morrisanimalfoundation.org/donate/cure-canine-cancer/

To learn more visit www.CureCanineCancer.org.

Posted by:

Dawn Kairns
Author of MAGGIE: the dog who changed my life
website: www.dawnkairns.com
blog: www.maggiethedogwhochangedmylife.blogspot.com
twitter: www.twitter.com/themaggiebook