Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 7, 2016 15:48:54 GMT -7
Hi everyone, this is my first time posting to the forum, and am hoping you guys can shed some light or what might be our best course of action.. (couldn't find the right category for conservative VS. surgery.. so maybe this can be re-routed to best forum). So, there's a lot of details to give here: - Our little guy, Woody, is a miniature black & tan dachshund. - Age 6 - Weighs about 12.5 pounds. - Live in Canada. Since about a year I think, Woody has had a couple relatively minor back episodes I would say. The first two times it was mainly that we'd noticed he looked uncomfortable/in pain, so we'd take him to the vet. The vet seemed to think he had a bulging disc towards the left, which was causing some pain especially on the left side of his lower back (L2/L3 region). He could always walk fine, go to the bathroom fine, etc. But we did some conservative treatment with each of the first couple episodes, including gabapentin, metacam, laser therapy, and electro-acupuncture. I wouldn't necessarily say we did the therapy for too too long.. maybe 4-8 laser treatments per episode (although he did stay on gabapentin for maybe close to two months). He seemed to bounce back pretty quickly from both of those. Our regular vet, who specializes in rehabilitation, always recommended that we do not crate rest, saying that a bit of moderate walking would help keep the muscles strong. I fear that may have been a mistake we made from the beginning after reading more through this site.. but anyway, I continue.. After his second little episode, which ran a similar course to the first one, which was back in January 2016, we noticed from that point up to now, he would regularly lick his back left paw at nights. Usually just a couple times a day.. and it didn't seem to be painful or anything - probably just a bit of tingling or numbness perhaps. (At the time, we actually didn't realize it was from his back. We even looked into his toenails thinking he might have had an infection, etc). So fast forward to two weeks ago, and poor Peanut has his worst episode yet. He seemed in more pain/discomfort this time, and was also light when walking on his back left leg (not in an uncoordinated fashion, just uncomfortable on it and sort of holding it out and back a bit). So we took him to the vet and started the same sort of conservative treatment with laser & acupuncture, but again not strict crate rest. It's been two weeks since that happened. This time he didn't really seem to improve. Even perhaps worse some days, now also licking the area right above his thigh muscle and his abdomen. So we started to question the no crate rest thing, and for a few days now have kept him much more confined. We were still quite worried though, so took him for an MRI today at a specialized neurology clinic. MRI photos: imgur.com/a/ITY5QSo, as sorta expected, he has several discs showing signs of dehydration/calcification, but one in particular, in between L2/L3 is showing left side compression against the spinal cord. So this pinching on the left is clearing what's causing the pain/tingling in his left leg and all the licking.. The vet also seemed to think he might even have very mild deficit in the back RIGHT leg because the spinal cord is being pushing up to the right. (we did the paw flip test and he took slightly longer to flip it back for the back-right paw. However, I repeated this test multiple times at home and was never able to have him repeat the same delay to flip it over (he always flipped it back right away)). So that's that. He's showing no signs of uncoordination in the back legs right now, walks fine, eats well, poops well, everything pretty good. He does still lick his back left paw though, and will occassionally whip around to nibble that spot between his thigh and abdomen. The neorology doctor explained it probably feels like a chord being pulled in his leg. The vet who did the MRI, who is a neorosurgeon, has essentially recommended we do surgery. He thinks that even with conservative treatment, there's a 50% chance that this will re-occur, possibly worse. And he's not sure the tingling sensation in the back-left paw will ever really subside. He's advocating this on the fact that medical management hasn't worked for us (which I would sort of agree to, but we haven't really tried strict crate rest at all up to this point), and that the longer we wait, the more dehydrated the discs will become and prone to herniating. He's also said it might be worthwhile to essentially empty some of the other dehydrated discs in the same area so the same thing doesn't happen to those ones. So.. I really don't know. I don't love the idea of surgery, but I don't want him to be in pain/uncomfortable forever, nor do I want something possibly worse to happen in the future if he were to relapse. But on the flipside, I'm not sure if we've really given conservative treatment a proper chance, and if we empty all those discs those vertebrate will fuse and he'll have the stiff, straight-sorta back forever. And I fear we've missed our chance with crate resting as I'm kicking myself for not realizing that sooner.. Hoping for some help/guidance/opinion/anything. Thank you,Ryan
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Post by Julie & Perry on Jul 7, 2016 17:03:53 GMT -7
Hi Ryan. I'm Julie. It's too bad but vets often don't see a lot of IVDD and are like a family doctor rather than a specialist. If you're happy with your vet you'll have to get them educated. First thing, crate Woody 25/7 for 8 weeks. I use a pack and play. Or if Woody has a crate use that. Discs get very little blood and take a long time to heal. Think of it as putting Woody in a cast to heal. Only out for potty. Look up on Dodger's List crate rest and IVDD education links. Right now Woody is an excellent candidate for conservative crate treatment. Generally surgeons recommend dogs get operated on if they've lost the ability to walk or are getting worse despite crate rest. Surgery can help but it's not the magic cure some doctors tell you. My Nala had surgery first and still had more IVDD episodes. You do need to address the chewing on a spot. Nerve damage can cause tingling that dogs try to stop by chewing. Gabapentin can help. Definitely address this with your vet. Also, is Woody on meds right now? IVDD episodes can be very painful. Hope this helps. Don't beat yourself up about the past. Just crate rest immediately and read, read, read,on Dodger's List. Educate yourself as soon as possible. Woody can make it and have a good life. Best value wishes. Julie and Nala.
Also, is Woody on anything for the swelling in his spinal cord? I'm not a vet but my Nala has always responded well to steroids. If you do this make sure Woody gets carafate from the vet and you get pepcid a/c from the store. Both are used to protect the stomach from ulcers which can be a side effect of steroids. Woody also needs pain meds and probably a muscle relaxer. Again talk to your vet. Best healing wishes.
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PaulaM
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Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
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Post by PaulaM on Jul 7, 2016 19:00:00 GMT -7
Ryan, welcome to Dodgerslist. We are glad you've joined us all. There is no right or wrong with deciding for surgery or wanting to give true conservative treatment a chance. The things the surgeon has mentioned are ideas to take into account in your decision making. These two pages will be very important in gaining a full understanding and deciding which is the best option for your family. --- Dr. Isaacs ACVIM (neuro) answers the questions our group wanted to know more about surgery: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/surgery.htm--- This page goes over surgery vs what would be expected with conservative treatment, how to monitor for neuro diminishment www.dodgerslist.com/literature/healingsurgery.htmFor right now we would be best able to help if you can fill us in a bit more: ☐ Let us know you are now on the same page about crate rest. The hallmark component of conservative treatment is the crate rest part. With little blood supply discs are much slower to form good scar tissue than it takes a blood rich broken bone to heal. That 6 weeks of a cast for a broken arm to heal is similar to the recovery suite being a kind of cast for the disc. 100% STRICT crate rest 24/7 for 8 weeks provides limited movement to allow good strong scar tissue to form. STRICT means: - no laps - no couches - no baths - no sleeping with you - no chiro therapy - no meandering at potty times. Carry to and from the recovery suite to the potty place and then allow a very few limited footsteps. Using a sling (long winter scarf, ace bandage, belt) will save your back and help to keep a wobbly dog's back aligned and butt from tipping over. A harness and 6 foot leash is to control speed and keep footsteps to minimum as you stand in one spot. An ex-pen in the grass is an excellent alternative to minimizing footsteps with the physical and visual to indicate there will be no sniff festing going on! Super tried and true tips for setting up the recovery suite in far right column- look for the pink box on this page: www.dodgerslist.com/literature.htm ☐ Is there still currently pain beyond the neuropathic pain of licking biting lower body such as: - ◻︎shivering-trembling ◻︎yelping when picked up or moved ◻︎reluctant to move much in crate such as shift positions or slow to move ◻︎tight tense tummy ◻︎restless, can't find a comfortable position. ◻︎arched back, ears pinned back ◻︎head held high or nose to the ground. ◻︎ holding the back leg flamingo style not wanting to bear weight ◻︎not their normal perky selves . ☐ How much does your Woody weigh? Please list the meds Wood is currently on. The dose in mgs and how often each is given. For how many days is/was the anti-inflammatory Rx'd for? Metacam as of date?: ?mgs ?x/day for x days? gabapentin ?mgs ?x/day Pepcid AC (famotidine) It is prudent to use an acid suppressor (Pepcid AC) with any use of an anti-inflammatory which causes extra stomach acids. ☐ Eating and drinking OK? Poops OK - normal firmness & color -no dark or bright red blood? NOTE: During conservative treatment, anytime out of the recovery suite is a dangerous time for the healing disc. Movement of the back can increase a disc tear and escape of disc material into the spinal cord . For an animal with very mild neuro deficits, the risk of transporting to therapy has to be carefully weighed against what benefit is to be gained. The date 7/7 in the subject line reflects the date you are starting true conservative treatment until a surgery decision is made..... the crate rest is the single most important part. There are no meds to heal a disc just the 100% STRICT crate rest 24/7 only out to potty for a full 8 weeks.
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 8, 2016 6:54:20 GMT -7
Thanks Paula & Julie. That's some helpful info. To answer a few of your questions:
- Woody is 12.5 pounds. - He's on 200mg of gabapentin 3 times a day since two weeks. Also taking metacam 5kg dose once a day 1.5mg/ml for spinal cord swelling.
All this does NOT seem to be alleviating his need to lick his back-left paw. Do you think this may go away after healing? Or once the disc material has pinched that nerve it's not going to go away? (Which is the impression the neurosurgeon gave us). - He doesn't seem in that much pain otherwise. One night we forgot to give him his gapapentin and in the morning he did seem uncomfortable. When this episode FIRST happened (before meds), he was shivering and couldn't get comfortable. But since meds he seems relatively comfortable for the most part. - Eating, drinking, poops ok. - YES, I'm on board with the idea of crate rest. I think it's the only way to truly try conservative treatment.
Do you guys still advocate for laser/acupuncture while on crate rest?
Thanks,
Ryan
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Jul 8, 2016 10:16:45 GMT -7
Ryan, as you may have already read, the expectation with conservative treatment is that the body will be able to reabsorb enough so that the disc or disc material is not pressing on the cord. There are situations where that does not happen and a surgery may be the option to physically remove the offending disc material. Licking per se is not damaging. Dogs will lick themselves many times as a comfort thing, a calming thing or as a grooming thing. However, you will want to be observant for obsessive licking escalating to breaking the skin, biting or deadly chewing off body parts in an attempt with neuropathic pain to alleviate quite burning painful sensations. Gabapentin is the drug that helps to tame this kind of nerve pain and he is on an aggressive dose of it. Have prepared a towel you can fold lengthwise to wrap around the neck and secure with duct tape to prevent him from reaching his lower body as you get to the vet for an e-collar and see what other meds can help with neuropathic pain. Do let us know specifically that Woody is in no pain. "not that much pain" "relatively comfortable for the most part" would too much pain. Often it takes three kinds of pain meds to address each source of typical pain with a disc episode. Tramadol as the general pain reliever, methocarbamol for muscle spasm pain and gabapentin for nerve pain. So. as you can see, IF you are seeing pain there is much in a vet's medicine bag to provide complete comfort from pain. What are the specific observation of pain you see and when do they occur.... nearing next dose of meds, when moving such as at potty time or repositioning in his crate? A pain med chart can be quite useful to make notes and see patterns with meds as a basis to discuss/advocate with your vet. D/l and print from here: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/crateRRP/medchart.pdfsmall With IVDD all 26 discs have the potential for early (prematurely) aging (loosing elasticity, becoming dehydrated). Is a disc problem 0% 50%, 75% or 100%? No one can predict if there will be just one disc episode during the dog's life span or if there will be multiple episodes. That is the nasty news about intervertebral disc disease. One of my doxies had surgery at age one and never her entire life of 17 years had another problem. You can read of stories of dogs here on this Forum or on our website having multiple disc episodes after a surgery or after conservative treatment. Fenestration is done at the time of a surgery. The adjacent discs on either side of the problem disc are fenestrated (removal of the degenerated/hardened disc material in the center of a disc) in hopes to prevent those discs from future tears that would pressure the cord. Fenestration is controversial among surgeons. It means more time under anesthesia. Some do it, some don't and some make the determination case by case. When disc material has escaped the walls of the disc and pressures the cord, damage to the cord develops. Those damaged areas with time become tough and during a surgery make it more difficult to separate/remove the disc pieces without causing harm to the cord. That is why a surgeon may prefer to perform surgery earlier rather than later. It is you who will have live in peace with the decision you make and make what is right for your family's situation. Having all the facts at hand, helps you make the best educated decision. I like how Dr. Isaacs explains decision making: " There is a balance between the risk associated with surgery versus the benefit gained if all goes well. With any surgery there is the potential risk that the patient may be permanently worse after the procedure...Any dog can be managed medically. However, typically the decision to treat medically versus surgically is dependent upon the risk:benefit ratio. If the same outcome can be obtained medically versus surgically then it is wise to treat medically. On the other hand, if there is a better outcome associated with surgery versus medical management, surgery warrants consideration." So for the time being until a decision is reached surgery or no surgery, doing true conservative treatment is the watch word. --- monitor for neuro function diminishment and the need to alert your vet at once. Either moving to the most powerful of anti-inflammatories the steroids to continue with conservative treatment or a surgery consideration. Maybe print and pin to fridge the predictable order of neuro function diminishment you'll want to monitor for... --- monitor for full pain control during conservative treatment. If not in control, advocate for a more aggressive pain med approach (Gabapentin with tramadol & methocarbamol) ----- During conservative treatment, anytime out of the recovery suite is a dangerous time for the healing disc. Movement of the back can increase a disc tear and escape of disc material into the spinal cord. For an animal with very mild neuro deficits, the risk of transporting to therapy has to be carefully weighed against what benefit is to be gained. When transport is necessary be sure to pad out any extra space in the crate with a rolled up blanket or towels. This prevent the back from shifting unexpectedly as you take a corner or brake. Some vets will make house calls for laser or acupuncture.
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 8, 2016 14:19:45 GMT -7
Thanks Paula, for the information.
No, I would say Woody is in no pain when he's on his meds. Do you feel that if they do seem to be in zero pain, that you should reduce the amount of gabepentin to make sure we're not over-medicating him?
You mentioned that the longer you wait, the harder the protruding disc material becomes in the spinal canal - thus making delaying a surgery potentially more risky to separate material from the chord. How long does it generally take to harden to that extent? Woody has been licking his back left paw since at least January, so that pinching on his leg nerve coming out of that disc has already been there for some time...
He is taking a 10# dose of 0.5ml metacam.. but our vet has not recommended anything else to go with it to protect the stomach. We only give it with food, but should we still be looking at something else to prevent the stomach?
One thing I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around - if we were to do surgery.. and if we were to do the fenestration of other discs, I know one other dachshund who had this done and to me, it's just so sad to see how stiff, rigidly-backed she is. Her run is more about just bouncing the front portion of her body up and down, she can't jump (not that they should anyway), and.. I'm just having such a hard time picturing my little guy - my little adventurer, like that as well - especially when I'm not convinced it's "crucial" to do that surgery. He's only 6 years old. For sure if we did conservative treatment, he might be good for 4 years lets say and then has another issue which then requires surgery. I'm not sure if it's worth it to chance that and give him 4 years of a healthy, normal anatomy and joy of being a dog then to solidify his back right now just "to be safe". But I'm basing that on one dog i know who had the fenestrations done. Am I wrong in that observation?
Sorry for the ramble.
Thanks,
Ryan
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Jul 8, 2016 18:53:26 GMT -7
Ryan, the time to reduce pain meds is when the test for pain stop of metacam begins. As no one wants to be using Metcam or any antiinflammatory past the benefit of all painful swelling resolved, many vets will try a 7 or a 14 days course. Then call for a test for pain stop of Metacam and the pain masking pain med. If there is no pain, then no meds at all are needed. If pain would surface then it is known another course of anti-inflammatory, pain meds and stomach protection is warranted. The full scoop on how anti-inflammatories are used with a disc episode is well worth reading or re-reading: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/healingsweling.htmPlease let us know what the bottle says about how long a course of metacam has been prescribed...7, 14 days or ? Do let us know what your surgeon or your vet says about how long wound healling/lesion development on the cord might take.... how long before a piece of escaped disc material might be kinda grown into/stuck to the cord? On the Forum we have observed too many issues even death because the stomach was not protected with the relatively safe for a health dog over the counter Pepcid AC (famotidine). So now we do stress to follow those vets who appreciate the need for GI tract protection. North Carolina U. recognizes the high incidence of GI irritation in dogs with disc problems. The reasons are that pain and body changes are stresses. Just as humans can experience ulcers when under stress. NCU and 11+ hospitals working with NCU prescribe a GI protectant. Dogs presented to NCU with IVDD often develop GI upset whether they are given anti-inflammaotry meds or not. www.cvm.ncsu.edu/vhc/tc/clinical_services/neuro/acute_disc.htmlFenestration to my knowledge and personal experience with my own dog does not cause the bony vetebrae to fuse together. My dog walked quite normally with a fenestration on either side of a bad disc. His back was not stiff. The entire disc is not removed only the inside material that has maybe hardened in order to prevent vertebral pressure from causing a tear to the exterior of the disc which is no longer very elastic and cushiony. What did the surgeon say when you asked about that dog, could it have been other diseases such as developing arthritis, a bone infection disease, etc.
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 9, 2016 9:38:12 GMT -7
Thanks Paula.
That's interesting about fenestration. The surgeon talked about how he'd remove the jelly from the discs and that they'd be like empty sacks almost between the vertebrate. However, he then went on to say that within 4-6 weeks they should fuse together...
So, maybe I misunderstood something there. Will need to talk to him again.
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Jul 10, 2016 10:17:28 GMT -7
Please let us know what the bottle says about how long a course of metacam has been prescribed...7, 14 days or ?
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 10, 2016 18:20:17 GMT -7
it was originally 14 days. but we were told to do another 2 weeks on it.
[12.5 pound gabapentin 200mg 3x/day metacam (1.5mg/ml )as of 6/23: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days as of 7/7: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days ]
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Post by Julie & Happy on Jul 10, 2016 18:37:16 GMT -7
We did the 8 weeks of crate rest and our boy healed nicely! It's called strict crate rest though and they mean it! He was completely paralyzed couldn't even pee on his own 😪 Really listen to this boards advice! They're experts on IVDD and many vets are not... Good luck!!!!
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Jul 11, 2016 10:11:39 GMT -7
Ryan thank you for the Rx clarity. So it appears there are so far two courses of Rimadyl each 14 days in length. The next test for pain would be on July 21. Let us know which your vet wants.... the stop of gabapentin or a backing of of it when metacam is stopped on July 21? Your job at home is to monitor for any hint of pain surfacing. It could take up to 30 days of metacam to get all the painful spinal cord swelling resolved. Surgery can be a consideration when there have been several attempts to stop metacam but the pain does not resolve. There have been some small amount of dogs who needed over 30 days on the anti-inflammatory.
What is the stumbling block to getting Pepcid AC on board? 5mgs Pepcid AC (famotidine) 2x/day. And giving Metacam with a meall as added GI tract protection.
12.5 pound gabapentin 200mg 3x/day metacam (1.5mg/ml )as of 6/23: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days as of 7/7: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 11, 2016 14:36:45 GMT -7
Thanks guys.
Woody has been on crate rest since Thursday officially. He seems pretty good overall - no pain at all, except for what I assume is just a mild discomfort when he licks his back-left paw. (Doesnt seem painful).
However, last night, for seemingly no reason (although he was chewing a bone which we had given him to occupy him), he all of a sudden was very uncomfortable. He wasn't whining or anything, but coudln't sit still. He would lie down, then twitch or kick his legs, then get up and reposition. Over and over. And he was sort of convulsing as if to throw up, but didn't.
It was about time for his pain meds anyway though so we gave those to him and went to bed - although I kept an eye on him. He settled and today he seems fine again.
I know we're early in crate rest, but is it normal to see a little up and down in terms of how things progress?
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Post by Pauliana on Jul 11, 2016 22:24:47 GMT -7
Hi Ryan,
Since Woody had that uncomfortable reaction after chewing the bone, acting like he was going to be sick.. Perhaps he swallowed some of it.. I would avoid bones for now until he is better.
He is in the early healing stage, but showing signs of not being able to get comfortable, is a sign of pain.. I would discuss adjusting his pain meds.. Let the Vet know what you are observing and see what he recommends.
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Jul 12, 2016 8:40:02 GMT -7
Ryan, would you be able to tell us what the stumbling block is to getting stomach protection on board? Pepcid AC (famotidine) 5mgs 2x/day?
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 14, 2016 7:05:47 GMT -7
We just put him on Pepcid AC - 5mg/day, per our vet's recommendation. (They said it was safe enough just with food but I asked for Pepcid AC anyway so they recommended that dose).
[12.5 pound gabapentin 200mg 3x/day metacam (1.5mg/ml )as of 6/23: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days as of 7/7: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days Pepcid AC 5mgs 1x/day]
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Jul 21, 2016 16:36:30 GMT -7
I introduced Woody a couple weeks ago. He's been on crate/room rest now for 2 weeks and seems to be doing much better - no pain at all from what we can see, happy, pep in his step, wants to play, etc. We took him to our regular vet a couple days ago (rehabilitation specialist) who did a physical examination of his back (he literally goes through each vertebrate checking for pain reaction). There was virtually no pain, compared to few weeks ago where he was very sensitive. So that was good, and based on what he saw, he recommended we go with conservative treatment. However, right after that visit our vet hopped on the phone with the neurosurgeon who did Woody's MRI couple weeks ago to compare their findings.. and now our regular vet - based on that phone call, has said that actually, surgery would probably be our safest option... So now I'm am just totally lost in what to do, and I'm having a hard time coming to a logical decision..
So, here's fully story up to current day:
History of Back Episodes:
1st episode: September 2014. He just seemed a little painful/uncomfortable. For probably a month following the episode, he was on 100mg of gabapentin and 0.5kg of metacam (for 2 weeks). We also did a few laser therapy treatments. He seemed to recover pretty well and quickly from that.
2nd episode: March 2015. Pretty much same as above.
3rd episode: happened in January 2016 while running through the snow. He was in pain/uncomfortable, but not "screaming" in pain and no neuro deficit at all from what we could tell. For almost 2 months from this time we took it a lot easier with him - a lot of rest, slow, flat walks, no jumping, etc. He was on 100mg of Gabapentin every 8 hours for this time, as well as 0.5kg of metacam for probably 2 weeks when it first happened. We also did laser therapy and acupuncture for the first 2-3 weeks. He seemed to recover fairly well, but ever since this episode up to today, he now licks his back-left paw every night, and occasionally even nibbles the spot between his thigh and back.
4th episode: happened mid-June 2016 after spending a week with his brother (wrestling) and chasing squirrels. This one seemed to cause him the most pain, and his back-left leg was clearly painful, stiff, and stuck out to the side. For the first couple weeks we employed same treatment program as above - except this time upped his Gabapentin dose to 200mg every 8 hours, but he was borderline getting worse - or at least not getting better. That's when I thought it was time to go get MRI to see exactly what is happening. At the same time as the MRI two weeks ago, we read more on Dodgerslist and decided to put him on stricter crate rest, which brings us to current date. (Before this time, we had never employed FULL crate rest. Yes, we always prevented him jumping and leaving him unattended, but would still take him on short leashed walks).
Latest MRI photos (low res): imgur.com/a/ITY5Q
- Spinal cord compression between L2 & L3
- Mild lateral herniation around L5 - Neurosurgeon also seemed to think Woody might have mild deficit in back-RIGHT leg because of the compression up and to the right of the spinal cord. However, our regular vet has since re-tested this and there is very minimal difference in the reaction time to flip the paw back over for the back-right paw.
Neurosurgeon recommendation: The neurosurgeon who analyzed the MRIs seemed to think this is a chronic issue that will keep recurring, and said he is probably licking his back-left paw because of a tingling sensation caused by the pinched nerve root from L2 / L3, and that this tingling will likely never go away.
Knowing our lifestyle with Woody (lots of travels, meeting people, etc), he recommended a type of surgery that involves coming in from the side (as opposed to cutting in from the top), drilling two holes in the vertebrate, and then using a (stick?) to enter through the first hole and push disc material out the second hole - to relieve spinal compression. He recommended this procedure as it is less invasive, allows for quicker recovery time, and would also be less visible afterwords.
Our regular vet (rehabilitation specialist): Following the MRI, we went to see our regular vet who specializes in rehabilitation. He observed that Woody was walking absolutely fine, no arch in his back, no pain. He recommended to continue with conservative treatment; room rest, gabapentin/metacam, laser therapy, and acupuncture.
However, following the consultation he spoke to the neurosurgeon over the phone. It seems our regular vet was under the impression that the L2/L3 herniation was a recent, acute lesion, whereas what he had been treating before (and the causing of the licking/tingling) was likely caused by a minor lateral herniation at L5ish. BUT by the neurosurgeon's point of view (and ultimately influencing our regular vet's opinion), it seems it is more likely that it has been this L2/L3 herniation all along causing issues, and is a chronic disc, and is likely the one causing the tingling/licking as well. So, our regular vet called us back and said ultimately, he thinks it would be safer in the long run to do the surgery suggested, since; it's a chronic disc, is pushing on the spinal cord, and the surgery is minimally invasive enough that rehabilitation and recovery would not be that bad...
Today: It's been two weeks since the MRI and recommendation from the neurosurgeon, and about 2 days since our regular vet gave his recommendation. After two weeks on crate/room rest he seems to be doing better. He is showing no discomfort (except for occasional licking of back-left paw) and has a pep in his step. However, he is still on pain meds, so it's hard to say. We are doing very short, slow 5-minute walks just to keep the muscles around the spinal cord strong.
The predicament: We realize it is probably a chronic issue, and there's a good chance it will come back in the future. How bad, or when, I don't know. We also worry that if he were ever to have another serious episode while away on travels in a foreign country, it could be a very dangerous situation if he needed emergency surgery. So, surgery is appealing in that it could solve this issue (for that disc) once and for all. But for some reason it still feels like we may be jumping the gun, as generally the rule of thumb from what I've read is that "surgery should be a last resort", and it seems we're considering surgery more of a "preventive" measure than a "reactive" measure. So.. is that still a good reason for surgery??
We're just having a hard time comprehending that we're going to put a walking, happy, (seemingly) pain-free dog into back surgery, with some scary risks, like potentially making it worse than it is. But on the other hand, if we wait and wait, it will likely come back - and how bad will it be the next time?
Side note:
I don't want to stir the pot so to speak, but I just want to throw another opinion out there on crate rest. Our vet specializes in rehabilitation and in his opinion, feels the "strict" crate rest is a traditional approach, but in fact, musculoskeletal considerations are very important for back recovery. Muscles will deteriorate very quickly with little to no movement, and it's those muscles keep the spinal cord and discs in place. Especially after 2 months of crate rest, there is much more stress on teh spine to support itself with all that muscle degeneration. And for 1 day of no muscle use, it takes 3 days to recuperate it to the same state. So 2 months does a lot of damage. He says the reason most people employ "crate rest" is because the alternative is free-for-all. But if you can allow the dog to walk around in a very controlled environement, including very short, slow walks (no jumping, running, playing - or anything that causes the back to bend quickly) then this is much better for keep the muscles strong around spine. He says even in poeple nowadays who experience disc herniations, physical therapy starts virtually immediately. Just wanted to put that out there. Even the neurosurgeon we spoke to agreed with that.
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Post by Julie & Perry on Jul 21, 2016 17:51:53 GMT -7
Just my opinion, my Nala had surgery first as she was completely paralyzed in her back legs. She also had fenestration on some adjoining discs. However, she's still had multiple disc episodes since. IVDD is a degenerative disc disease. One preventative surgery won't cure it and there are always risks with any surgery. Since Woody is responding so well to conservative treatment I wouldn't think surgery is needed. At least I'd get a second opinion. As far as controlled time out? No. Dogs can jump or move and undo all their progress in a moment. Any unnecessary movement lead to trouble. Dogs on crate rest that aren't paralyzed move around enough in their crate and at potty time. Paralyzed dogs can have very gentle range of movement to help maintain muscles. Better a little rehabilitation than making it worse. As far as travel, that's a tough one. With Woody's condition would it be possible to keep him at home with a house sitter instead? If he absolutely must go with you I'd take a copy of his medical records and have researched a good animal hospital and surgeon in the area. If in the U.S. Dodger's List has a link to find out good IVDD doctor's in different areas. Don't be rushed into a decision as Woody is stable right now. Best wishes to you and Woody.
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Jul 22, 2016 10:22:46 GMT -7
Ryan, the crate is to keep them from over doing, going on walks is overdoing... it is causing vertebral pressure to that weak disc trying to heal. There is no proof that all the spinal cord swelling has been resolved until all meds have been stopped and there is no pain. When there have been several repeated attempts to stop meds and yet the pain will not resolve, that would be time to consider surgery to avoid a life time of having to use pain meds to enjoy life. If the pain has not resolved in 28 days of metacam it may well be time for a consideration of a surgery. Disc healing is a whole different matter.... there are no meds to help a disc form scar tissue...that takes limited movement and time of 8 weeks. So until there would be a surgery, let that disc heal, protect the spinal cord! 12.5 pound gabapentin 200mg 3x/day metacam (1.5mg/ml )as of 6/23: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days as of 7/7: 5kg dose 1x/day for 14 days
Was Metacam extended? Is gabapentin the only med on board now? Disc disease demands owner understanding the the disease. Muscle tissue will always come back when it is safe to again have the back, the vertebrae moving. There are potty breaks every 4-6 hours where the few footsteps will keep muscle circulation up and joints flexible. If there is too much movement before the disc has healed in 8 weeks there is a good chance for that still weak and early healing disc to do great damage to the spinal cord. Would the spinal cord become too severerly damage it will not ever come back. Woody would then have been sentenced to life-time paralysis. My instincts follow along with vets who do understand IVDD that the priority is to preserve the spinal cord by waiting til all 8 weeks of 100% STRICT crate rest have been completed before beginning a slow introduction back to physical activity. Not all vets know IVDD, that is why it is so important to do your own reading so you are prepared to politely say "no thank you" to harmful advice. Disc surgery, btw, IS NOT a minimally invasive procedure! The vertebral bone is drill/cut into, muscle tissue is cut and the surgeon will be working on the spinal cord itself in removing escaped disc material...that is no small thing, no minimally invasive procedure at all! Things can go wrong. That all being said when you have a qualified, well trained surgeon and the surgery is needed it is a wonderful thing and the risk of surgery is reduced. When there are repeated disc problem at the same disc (a chronic situation) that could well mean the time to consider if surgery is an option for your family. Ryan, there is no right or wrong answer here about when or if a surgery. The decision is to be made by you weighing all the factors so that as Dr. Isaacs, ACVIM (neurology) says: " It is important to not be rushed into making the decision and have the opportunity to ask as many questions as needed. Surgery needs to be a decision an owner enters into recognizing the risk, but also recognizes the benefit. This way if something unforeseen occurs an owner can be comforted and at peace with the fact that surgery was the right decision and they did all they could for their dog. There is a balance between the risk associated with surgery versus the benefit gained if all goes well. With any surgery there is the potential risk that the patient may be permanently worse after the procedure. The risk is greater with intervertebral disk disease that is severe, at multiple sites, and chronic compared with mild, single site, acute." The rest of Dr. Isaac's information is here: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/surgery.htm Also recommended reading on surgery here: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/healingsurgery.htm
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Aug 13, 2016 11:16:25 GMT -7
Hi all,
So I've unfortunately moved from the conservative forum to surgery now.. Our Woody who was doing conservative treatment ended up getting worse one day (which was surprising because he was doing so well), becoming wobbly on his back legs. So we took him for surgery right away. They removed the offending disc material, and it's been a week now since the surgery. He had a chronic disc that had been bothering him for past couple years, and he went wobbly because it re-ruptured, becoming "acute on chronic".
He can walk virtually on his own - although we keep the sling under him just in case. He still doesn't have total balance, and is still recouping neurologically in the back legs (with the paw flip, still takes a few seconds for him to flip them back).
He's on crate rest, but we take him for potty walks, and do 3 little exercise sessions a day just with sit-to-stand, side-sway balancing, and leg movement/stretches. We've also started laser therapy.
We've been advised we can start water treadmill and acupuncture once the sutures heal over, and start doing more core exercises once he's stronger, but besides that, is there any other post-surgery therapy we should do? I've read a bit about hypobaric chambers (although I can't seem to find one nearby for veterinary purposes, being in Ottawa Canada). Not sure if anyone has experience or recommends this?
And I'm also wondering what sort of supplements we could give him to aid in his healing and in the future to prevent problems with other discs.
We do give him glucosamine supplements now and then, but our rehabilitation vet says there's no actual scientific studies that show it does anything. A few people have recommended the following to us as well:
- Vetri-Disc by VetriScience. - Standard Process’s ‘Canine Whole Body Support’
Anyone have knowledge of those to recommend?
Thanks,
Ryan
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Post by Romy & Frankie on Aug 13, 2016 13:35:32 GMT -7
Surgery immediately removes the offensive disc material and stops the pressure on the spinal cord. Immediate neuro improvement may or may not come during the 6 weeks of post-op rest… as nerves may take more than 6 weeks to heal… in fact there is no time limit for nerves to heal. There may be temporary neuro setbacks caused by the swelling the surgical procedure itself causes. Surgical swelling likely will subside in two weeks so that the true direction of nerve healing can better be seen. Dr. Isaacs, DVM, ACVIM (Neurology) addresses Dodgerslist members' questions on surgery: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/surgery.htmIt is great that Woody is walking well. The knuckling is a caused by the nerve damage and should improve over time. I am going to ask a few questions to help us understand Woody's post surgery situation better. ▷ Is the surgeon a general practice DVM or a specialist (ACVIM neurology or ACVS ortho)? ▷ What medications are currently being used. Please include dosage and frequency? ▷ Is Woody showing any signs of pain at this point? ▷ Is Woody eating and drinking OK? Poops OK - normal firmness & color -no dark or bright red blood? ▷ How long did the surgeon recommend for crate rest? Water therapy is excellent for a post surgery dog. My Frankie walked on an underwater treadmill after his crate rest was over following his surgery. I don't think he would have recovered nearly as fast without it. Here is a video of what it looks like: We have some information about supplements for the IVDD dog here: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/Supplements.htm
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Aug 13, 2016 13:52:23 GMT -7
Thanks for the reply.
He's on: [12.5 pound] - 100mg of Gabapentin every 8 hours. - was on 25 mg of tramadol every 12 hours, but that finished today. - 5kg dose of metacam once a day
And for other questions: - Surgery performed by neurosurgeon. We're also working with our regular veterinarian who specializes in rehabilitation for the post-surgery aspects. - no, doesn't seem to be in any pain at all. - Pooped for first time 2 days ago. Seems to poop once a day now. No blood seen, and not a perfect poop but is pretty good for having not pooped in 5 days prior I'd say. - Eating and drinking OK - Surgeon has recommended two weeks strict crate rest, and rest will be determined at our post-op re-check, but it'll likely be 6 weeks crate rest but slowly introducing more controlled activity and therapy.
So again, curious as to any other therapies to consider which we aren't already doing, and any supplements people can recommend.
Thank you
Ryan
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Aug 13, 2016 17:57:28 GMT -7
Ryan, if you had a chance to read our supplement article, Romy pointed you to, you'll see there is no research evidence to prove if the GAG type supplements do anything to keep a disc maintained and from prematurely aging. If money is no object you can try them as they likely would not do any harm....do read the supplement article for the full story: Consider that Woody is like a stroke victim in having to relearn coordination of muscles with the nerve messages sent to his paws and legs. I really sounds like Woody is on a very good path of nerve repair. Nerves are slow to heal and something we need to accept that it just takes time. Maybe thinking in terms of months rather than days/weeks. The very best therapy will be the underwater treadmill, as it really expedites the ability to re-learn how to walk and place paws properly plus strengthing his muscles: www.dodgerslist.com/literature/Supplements.htm
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Aug 14, 2016 9:56:59 GMT -7
Ah, so another issue. In Woody's poop last night we thought we noticed a dark spot which we figured might be blood. We told the surgeon who advised we take him off metacam in case.
That's got me worried though. Is there anything we can do?
Ah my apologies, I overlooked the link Romy provided at the end. That does make sense though, as through my research online I haven't found any qualitative scientific research for the supplements I mentioned.
That's sort of why I was posting here though - to see if there is a feeling among users as to what may work or provide some benefit..
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Aug 14, 2016 12:27:04 GMT -7
If the dark spot in the poop was black, tarry digested blood, then it is the GI tract that has been damaged by the Metacam and the reason your vet asked that it be stopped. Pepcid AC works to suppress the extra acids that Metcam and ordinary stress can cause. By discussing with the vet if sucralfate can be added, that med will place a gel coat over any of the damaged areas of the stomach linings (ulcers) that were bleeding and under the gel coat provide the right environment for better healing. Read so you know why you are advocating for sucralfate and the timing it will need with food, with Pepcid AC: marvistavet.com/sucralfate.pml
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Aug 14, 2016 12:47:15 GMT -7
Thanks Paula.
Yes it was a very dark black spot. But was quite small. He has also pooped again since then and it looked fine. We'll give Pepcid AC with food and continue without metacam for now.
Is this something to be worried about?
Thank you
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Aug 14, 2016 15:44:01 GMT -7
Ryan, sounds like maybe just the Pepcid AC with food and no more metacam will be work. Hopefully no post op pain will surface.. if it does you would just alert your vet and likely just pain meds would be adjusted for a bit longer.
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Aug 14, 2016 16:43:48 GMT -7
Ok, thanks Paula
He pooped again later this afternoon. Perhaps still a bit of a dark spot but I wouldn't say "really" dark. His poops do seem to be mucus-y though - and although not super definitive either, perhaps a tint of red in the mucus. Since he didn't poop for 6 days following surgery, perhaps his GI is irritated as well?
We're giving half a 10mg tablet of the Pepcid Ac once a day. Do you think that's enough?
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PaulaM
Moderator.
Member since 2007: surgery, conservative . Montana, USA
Posts: 19,928
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Post by PaulaM on Aug 15, 2016 10:23:04 GMT -7
Ryan, we follow the vets who use the higher end of the range for Pepcid AC. Dogs are creatures of routine, when their "usual" changes, they can get stressed just as people do and produce more stomach acid. And. of course, all anti-inflammatory drugs can cause an increase in stomach acids. So for a 12 lbs dog 5mgs of Pepcid AC 2x/day is the usual.
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Ryan & Woody
New Member
MALE - Dachshund . mild hrt murmur
Posts: 32
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Post by Ryan & Woody on Aug 15, 2016 11:10:42 GMT -7
Thanks Paula.
Aside from the dark blood that Pepcid AC should help alleviate, from your experience on this forum, is it normal to have a bit of (fresh) bloody mucus in the poop following the stress and anesthesia of surgery? I'm assuming his GI tract is probably inflamed/irritated from all that - in combination with the fact he didn't poop in 6+ days following surgery...
I've read in a couple places online it could be expected.. but despite trying to do some searches on this forum, I still can't tell if it's something that is somewhat normal or something we should be more worried about.. Or how long it might take to clear up, etc..
Thanks
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