<br clear="all">Well, Maggie is back from the vet. CBC, chem screen, urinalysis, fecal
were all ran. Fecal was fine. Urinalysis showed excessive protein in her
urine. This further led to the blood testing. Her sodium was low, her
phosphorous was high. The ratio of sodium to potassium placed her at
borderline Addison's Disease.<br>
<br>
The vet gave her three injections for calming the bowel, antibiotic, and something else. WBC count was OK. She just had <span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1305930778_0">blood work</span> on 4/23 and the levels of the chem screen were normal. <br>
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We are to give her pedialyte or gatorade over the weekend and muzzle her
for outside so she does not eat grass (showed in fecal). No food until
Saturday night and then onto the <span style="border-bottom: 2px dotted rgb(54, 99, 136); cursor: pointer;" class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1305930778_1">bland diet</span> again. <br>
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If she has not improved on Monday am, I am to drop her off at the vet
before work for more tests. Then, we will further pursue the possibility
of Addisons.<br>
<br>
She has diarrhea, she has a tremor in her back legs, she has increased
thirst, she stopped getting on the dog couch about a month or so ago,
and she has trouble off and on going up and down the 2 stairs to the
outside. We have had her to the vets for gastro symptoms and for
lethargy as well as not climbing the 2 stairs about 3 or 4 times the
last year. I guess the signs are adding up.<br>
<br>
It's not aging. 11 1/2 years old and we have to decide if she has
Addisons, do we treat it and if so how, depending on the type. Vet
states it could cost $500 a month to treat.<br>-- <br>DRool to all in need,<br>Dee, <br>Maggie, Mazzie, Oliver, Cooper,& Harvey<br>