[Dailydrool] crossposted: Lyme aggression

sally king sally.king at nqe.com
Mon May 12 05:44:20 PDT 2008


I got this e-mail this morning, thought I'd pass it along. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
We recently had a very strange event which I think  we should share around the rescue-community: Young (~2 years) M Lab-mix, came into our program with a 'questionable' background; may have been aggressive toward some children; then again, maybe not. 

We kept him for a long while - months of fostering in our premier foster-home, no problems; placed him carefully, with a single middle-aged man who adored him. We also, 
as we do all our dogs, tested him for Lyme. He had it; we treated it; case closed -- we thought. 

Everything went very well after adoption - the star of his obedience-class, frequent alum-visits to clinics - for over a year. And truly adored by his adopter. 
Then, over 12-mos post-adopt, Mojo became suddenly, erratically, and seriously aggressive: literally attacked visitors to his home, people in the vet's waiting room, etc. Terrifying. Very-sudden. Totally inexplicable. He was returned to us with genuine heartbreak from a very loving adopter. 
Mojo then went to our regular vet and was a totally different dog: bared-teeth and growls at anyone who approached his kennel, lunged at other dogs when being walked, etc. We figured that whatever was happening with him, he had become un-placeable and started a TDC (Tough 
Decisions Committee - something we 'convene' that is open to anyone with an interest in the dog when we think that euthanasia might be an option). 
However, someone at the vet's office said that perhaps we should test him for Lyme. Huh???????? 
They had had a regular client of theirs come in recently with similar, out-of-the blue-aggro, and it turned out that Lyme was the problem - puzzled them, but seemed to be the case. Okay -- hey, we'll try anything -- so we had him tested. 
He was high positive! 

Fine, we started treatment while we continued to figure out what to do with him via the TDC. Almost immediately, however, once the antibiotics began, the Mojo we knew 
came back!! He was himself again - bouncy, happy, a bit neurotic, but not at *all* aggressive! 
The staff at the vets was amazed, but all confirmed this change. We didn't believe it; vets didn't believe it... BUT a thorough search of the Internet turned up a number of studies (plus) anecdotal-observations indicating that in some dogs (and some humans!!) the primary-symptom of 
their Lyme Disease can be sudden, irrational and serious aggression. 

We've known for a while to check thyroid-levels of dogs that show aggro that just 'doesn't fit'. Now we've added testing for Lyme as well. And we have - results not-yet in - another dog, placed 12-mos-plus, returned because of out-of-the-blue aggro... he also tested high-positive 
for Lyme! 
We've started treatment; we'll be monitoring his response. 
So - plug this in to your protocols; worth checking-out. 
I spent the day today with Mojo... he truly is just the same dog we placed over a year ago. 
(We've let his original adopter know - because he vowed that it had to be *something* causing this behavior. But he cannot take Mojo back because his roommate, one of the people attacked, won't even consider it. 
For the record, there were no skin-breaking contacts in any of these attacks, but plenty of fear and we consider them as serious as if they were full-fledged bites.) 

We actually have additional insight into this because one of our volunteers (human) has had Lyme? Disease. Took many months for her to be diagnosed; once she 
was, she learned it's a VERY-nasty bug that remains permanently, waiting for a chance to 'crop-up' again. 
When we place Mojo again (TDC unanimously agrees we should), we're going to explain the background, these amazing events, and require the adopters test every 6-mos, whether or not he's symptomatic. We have no idea whether that will work or be sufficient - we're rather flying blind in this - but it seems rational. 
But based on what we know now, its a real possibility: Lyme *can*, in a few rare-cases, cause aggression- aggression that can be reversed. 

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