[NAGDU] Scary week!

Tami Jarvis tami at poodlemutt.com
Thu Aug 2 02:03:33 UTC 2018


Daryl,

So glad it worked out and Jenny is okay now. We'll be wishing her a good 
recovery from the surgery, and you a good recovery from worry and all.

Tami

On 08/01/2018 06:08 PM, Daryl via NAGDU wrote:
> Hi all!
> It's been a super scary week in our home. Before I get into it, we had an ultimately positive outcome, but getting to this point was not fun.
> 
> Friday morning, I got in to work, and Jenny threw up all over my cubicle just as my shift started. An hour and a half later, she threw up again. I thought she'd gotten in to something that had leaked out of the garbage can, because she'd been licking the floor in the kitchen before work. After Jenny's stomach was empty, she stopped throwing up so much, was able to keep food down...
> And then threw up again.
> 
> I took her to her regular vet clinic, but her regular vet was on holidays. We visited another vet, who - based on Jenny's symptoms of good energy, no overt signs of pain, and occasional vomiting - prescribed anti-nausea drugs and an antacid, and advised us to bring Jenny in to emergency if something changed.
> 
> Four hours later, Jenny turned her nose up at the bland food we fixed for her. I thought it was something in the texture and the smell, so didn't think much of it... until she refused her regular kibble.
> Over the next 18 hours, we tried to coax Jenny to eat. She became lethargic, refused all offers of food - even her favourites - and she was drooling so profusely that I was cleaning her face every half hour. We thought she might have had a reaction to the antacid, because her symptoms seemed to mirror those of a drug interaction, but we decided to take her to the emergency vet when she wouldn't greet my husband when he came home from his class.
> The emergency vet noticed her abdomen was clearly bothering her, and she was severely dehydrated. She was admitted to vet emergency overnight.
> We learned a few things very quickly. Blood tests indicated that her kidneys, liver and pancreas were all healthy. She was responding well to IV fluids, but she was not eating on her own.
> Monday morning, she was no longer dehydrated, and the hospital recommended an ultrasound. When the results came back, they were quite sure there was some kind of foreign body in Jenny's digestive tract. It looked like a string, but the ultrasound was not overly clear. They advised on surgery, and we agreed.
> Overnight, they prepped her and performed the surgery. Thankfully, the object - a nectarine pit, as it turned out - had not gone into her intestines. They were able to remove it easily, and Jenny was responding well to the anesthesia.
> Twelve hours post-op, she was eating on her own. Six hours later, we were able to bring her home.
> She's been home for 24 hours now, resting, groggy on pain meds, but SOMUCH back to herself.
> It's been amazing to see how quickly things can change. I'm so so glad my girl is OK!
> 
> Thanks for reading!
> Daryl
> 




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