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February 28, 2008

Blind Bo Comes Back To The Ranch

Bo_with_erin_feb_28

After two weeks in the hospital, I finally brought blind Bo back to the ranch today.  I had taken him in for head X-rays and a neurological evaluation because of sudden and unexplained episodes of nystagmus and loss of balance.  Our equine vet, Dr. Erin Taylor, had asked me to leave him at the hospital for further tests and evaluation, and she also wanted to start treating him with antibiotics and steroids to see if his clinical signs would improve.

His symptoms have improved but have not gone away, and after further consultations with the internal medicine specialists and neurologists at Washington State University's veterinary teaching hospital, the next step will be an MRI of his head.  (A horse's head and lower limbs are the only part of the horse body that will fit in an MRI!)  We will get that scheduled in the next week. 

I took the photo above of Erin with Bo in his stall at the clinic this morning.  And then, much to Erin's consternation, I started photographing a series of "action" shots as she led Bo outside to our waiting horse trailer.  I figured this perspective would be a little "something different."  Here's the first in the series:

Erin_leading_bo

And here she is rounding the corner with trusting Bo following along behind:

Erin_leading_bo_2_2

Finally, she brings Bo to a halt at the back of the trailer:

Erin_leading_bo_3

And then, like all of our blind horses, he loaded right up like a champ.  When I got back to the ranch and led him out to his corral, he went straight to his feeder and started eating hay.  He didn't pay any attention to his new girlfriend, blind Guadalupe, but she was so excited to have him back that she raced around the corral, bucking and kicking up her heels.  He pretended not to notice.  (He's the strong, silent type.)

Update on Briggs -- Surgery Postponed

Our vet Dr. Brenda Culver called last night to say that Briggs' initial bloodwork showed low protein levels.  After further tests and evaluation today, Brenda told me this afternoon that she and Britt determined that Briggs has a kidney disease called glomerulonephritis.  The filters in his kidneys aren't working properly, and protein -- rather than being kept and used by the body -- is getting washed out of his system along with the wastes.  You can read a really interesting and detailed explanation of this disease here.

This is caused by some type of inflammation that could be triggered by a number of things, including tick-borne diseases, bartonella or toxoplasmosis, among others.  (We already know Briggs is heartworm-negative.)  So Britt has sent more bloodwork in to test for a variety of these potential causes.  Until we get those results back next week and can treat Briggs accordingly, Brenda says we don't want to challenge his system anesthetically, and thus she is postponing his eye surgery.

On the good news front, Britt said his neuro exam did not indicate any intercranial cause of his wobbliness (i.e., a lesion or tumor of some sort), and chest and abdominal X-rays also looked good, as did an ultrasound of all of his organs.  So if we can just get his kidney problem sorted out and treated, we can take care of his eyes.  In the meantime, Brenda is doing pain management and keeping him comfortable.

Please keep our little blind boy in your thoughts.

February 27, 2008

Blind Briggs Goes To The Hospital

Briggs_with_brenda_and_tonopen

This is why we do this.

The eye exam today made clear that Briggs was definitely a dog in pain.  He has been suffering for a long time.  And now he's finally going to get help.

First, a brief explanation of glaucoma.

The eye is constantly producing an internal fluid called the 'aqueous humor,' which normally drains out through a part of the eye called the 'drainage angle.'  This balance of fluid production and outflow is what maintains a steady pressure inside the eye.  With glaucoma, the fluid can't drain out and thus continues to build up inside, causing the internal pressure to rise dramatically.  The increased pressure damages both the optic nerve and the retina.  Eye pressure -- called intraocular pressure, or IOP -- is measured in millimeters of mercury (mmHG), and the normal range in a dog is 15 to 25 mmHG.

In the photo above that I took this morning, our vet Dr. Brenda Culver is measuring Briggs' eye pressure using a diagnostic instrument called a Tono-Pen while vet tech Heather holds him.  In his left eye, the pressure was a stunning 80 mmHG.  This was compounded by the fact that his lens had detached and was pressing on the inside of his cornea.  His right eye was 35 mmHG, but Brenda thinks the lower IOP is only because the pressure had been so high for so long that it had finally started to kill the cells that produce the fluid in the first place.

In humans, glaucoma is reported to cause constant head pain as bad as a migraine.  Because dogs with glaucoma typically have higher IOP readings than humans with glaucoma, some veterinary ophthalmologists believe that this condition is even more painful in dogs.  And with pressures as high as 80 mmHG, I can only imagine how much pain Briggs has lived with ... and for how long. 

In this next photo, Brenda is looking at his eyes using an ophthalmic microscope called a slit-lamp, which magnifies all the internal structures:

Briggs_with_brenda_and_slit_lamp

Then Brenda stained his eyes with a dye strip and  turned on the blue light setting on the slit-lamp for another look.  This would reveal whether there were any ulcers or other damage to the cornea:

Briggs_with_brenda_and_blue_light

The condition of his corneas is important to know because of the surgery Brenda is going to perform.  Rather than enucleate, or remove, his painful blind eyes -- there's no way to restore vision, so our only goal now is to eliminate his pain -- we're going to try and save his eyeballs and thus his 'natural' look.  This is done with a two-part procedure called 'evisceration and intrascleral prosthesis.'

In this operation, Brenda will make an incision at the top of the eye, remove the internal contents, and place a silicone ball -- the prosthesis -- inside the globe.  Then she will suture up the incision site.  The cornea keeps the prosthesis in place.  So the eye will look relatively normal ... not compared to a typical healthy eye, but it will still look like an eye.  Briggs will be able to blink, move his eyes around, and otherwise look like himself.  You can read more on this procedure here.

We have done this on several animals, including Widget and Dusty.  There are risks that the body will reject the prosthesis as a foreign object, but so far we haven't had that happen.  If it does happen and we can't save it, then we will end up removing the eye after all.  We have not been able to do this procedure on all of our blind dogs who've had eyes removed because the cornea has to be healthy and in good condition, and also because some eye diseases make this procedure simply not feasible.

Brenda is planning on doing Briggs' surgery tomorrow, but only after we get his blood work back and after Brenda's husband, Dr. Britt Culver (our internal medicine specialist), does a neurological evaluation.  Because of Briggs' neurological deficits -- he wobbles -- he could be at slightly higher risk for anesthesia, so we want to make sure we minimize those risks as much as possible before proceeding.

At the top of this post I wrote, "This is why we do this."  But we couldn't do this alone.  As I mentioned when I wrote about Pepper last week, all of our animals get the best veterinary care possible because of the sanctuary's amazing friends.  In the wake of Pepper's loss, we had a number of wonderful gifts to help pay for her care at WSU.  And this afternoon, shortly after I got back from Helena, we had another example of how blessed we and these animals are.  One of the kindest, most generous individuals we have ever known called Alayne to make a gift that will cover the entire cost of Briggs' surgery and hospital stay.

That kind of compassionate, generous spirit is how we do this. 

February 26, 2008

My Eyes Hurt

Briggs_eyes_1

Our new arrival, little blind Briggs, is having a terrible flare-up with his eyes today.  We had noticed yesterday that he was sleeping a lot, more so than the other dogs, but we thought it was probably just because of the trip.  Yet this morning it was clear his eyes were suddenly very painful.  He was squinting a lot and had a lot of tearing, sure signs of ocular pain.  I called our primary care vet, Dr. Brenda Culver, first thing.  She suspected, as we did, that he's going through a pressure spike with his glaucoma, so Brenda had me put him on some pain and anti-inflammatory medications.  I took that photo above of Briggs this afternoon, and you can see how painful those eyes look.  I bet he was probably sleeping a lot and was more subdued yesterday because he felt the pressure spike coming on.

In this next photo he's not sleeping but actually rubbing his eyes repeatedly:

Briggs_rubbing_eyes

I had earlier scheduled an appointment for Brenda to see Briggs tomorrow morning in Helena, so we'll have a much better idea then of what's going on with him.

As much as his eyes were hurting, it didn't keep him from looking forward to his dinner tonight.  While I was writing this, Alayne was in the dining room filling the 23 dog bowls, and Briggs heard the food being stirred and came to life.  He raced into the dining room and stood next to Alayne, baying at her until she finally gave him his bowl.  A hurting Beagle is still, well, a food-motivated Beagle!

(In case you're wondering, the 23 bowls are for the dogs who stay with us in our house and the cottages next to our house; the rest of the dog family is over at Widget's House.)

February 25, 2008

Beagle Bookends

Beagle_bookends_1

Speaking of Beagles, here are a couple of lunchtime photos I took of deaf Stuart on the left and blind Widget on the right, snoozing together next to the dining table.  Oddly -- especially for Beagles -- neither one got up to demand our lunch.

At some point their noses must have alerted them to the presence of nearby food, and the Beagles stirred ... yet not too much:

Beagle_bookends_2

But, realizing that lunch was now over, there was nothing left to do but settle back in and resume their nap:

Beagle_bookends_3

That's Daisy the miniature Dachshund poking her head out from her pillow bed behind Widget.  The contingent of Dachshunds -- seven strong -- have noted with growing alarm the increasing number of Beagles here.  More worrisome, the Dachshunds have overheard the servants talking about how fond they are of the ranch Beagles, and in little Doxie voices they whisper to each other, "What's up with that?"

February 24, 2008

Little Briggs Comes To The Ranch

Briggs_with_alayne

Alayne and I spent the weekend trying to recharge our emotional batteries after losing Pepper on Thursday, and here's one thing that really helped -- wobbly blind Briggs arrived at the ranch this afternoon.  He has a true Widget-certified Beagle personality, and Widget's same bossy, insistent, pay-attention-to-me-now attitude.  Stuart the deaf Beagle is not nearly as bossy (oh thank heavens) but has more than his fair share of Beagle spunk.

Morgan S., who runs Atlanta Beagle Rescue, had pulled Briggs from a rural Georgia shelter where he had been turned in as a stray.  We first learned about Briggs on the day we lost our beloved old Dillon.  Morgan had earlier sent us both blind Widget and blind Willie, and we were delighted she'd been able to save this little guy, too.  You can read Morgan's write-up on Briggs on her blog here

So this morning she put Briggs on a Delta flight leaving Atlanta at 6:50 a.m., and after making his connecting flight in Salt Lake City, he was at the Missoula airport by noon.  Alayne drove in to pick him up, and I took the photo of the Alayne holding Briggs this evening when they got back to the ranch.  When Alayne got to the ticket counter at the airport to get Briggs, she could hear a Beagle baying from the cargo area in back.  The airline staff were only too happy to hand him over and send him on his way!

Briggs is definitely a wobbler, too, although more stable than our other wobblers.  I can't tell if it's cerebellar hypoplasia or not -- he can maintain his balance better than our animals with that condition typically can -- but he's just like them in one respect:  when you hold him in your arms, he goes absolutely still and just melts. 

His eyes really bulge, and we suspect he has glaucoma.  I went to take his eye pressures this afternoon using our Tono-Pen but the batteries had died -- and of course they're a fancy, medical device kind that has to be special ordered.  (On Monday's to-do list now.)  We will take Briggs to see our vet, Dr. Brenda Culver, this week for an eye exam when we go to pick up Trooper and Popeye.  (Trooper's hip surgery went well, by the way, and Popeye's eye is healing, too.)  I worry that we will probably have to remove both of his eyes, given their appearance and the tearing and discharge we see.  In fact, they bulge more than any glaucoma eyes I have seen in a dog, and if the intraocular pressures are as high as I think they are, his head is throbbing. 

For now, although his eyes bother him, he's still a very happy boy and his baying has announced to all who can hear it that another Beagle has arrived.  It's Beagle mania at the Rolling Dog Ranch.

---

Thank you to everyone who gave us such wonderful emotional support in the past few days after we lost Pepper.  We read each of those blog comments and emails, and believe me, it makes a difference.  It's not just our grief but shared grief.  And there is strength in that.  It really does provide comfort and solace knowing so many incredible people care so much about these special animals and what we're going through when we lose one.

February 21, 2008

Pepper Died Today

Pepper_on_bed

Hope did not prevail in the end.  Our little blind Shepherd, the girl with the "perpetual puppy" look, died this afternoon.  We made the decision to let her go gently and with dignity. 

The MRI images showed that a tumor at the base of her brain had obstructed the flow of the fluid that normally bathes the spinal cord.  With nowhere to go, the fluid had backed up inside her brain, creating a large reservoir and causing intercranial pressure to rise dramatically.  Although the neurologists have seen this type of tumor before, they have not seen a dog in as bad a condition as Pepper.  Usually the dog is showing much milder symptoms.  In Pepper's case, she had somehow been able to compensate incredibly well while her brain was being flooded.  Yet when her brain finally was tipped over the edge, she had nothing left to give ... which is why, even today, she had yet to come out of her coma-like condition.

Dr. Wininger explained that while it would be possible to do surgery and remove the tumor, we had only a 20% chance of her surviving the operation.  Those are terrible odds but one we'd be willing to take if she could beat this thing ... but Dr. Wininger said the tumor would, in fact, come back.  Even if she survived surgery and then completed a month-long radiation therapy, the tumor would still come back -- in a year at the outside. And at that point we would have no other treatment options -- a second surgery is not feasible -- and Pepper would be right back where she is today. 

There are two possible types of tumor causing the obstruction -- a choroid plexus tumor or a meningioma.  The first one, the choroid plexus, is the worst of the two, and after surgery and radiation it would be back within months.  The meningioma is the "nicer" tumor that might allow a survival time of up to a year, but it too would still come back to kill her.

That one-year time frame is a median survival rate, so if you imagine a bell curve, a year would be at the top or center of the curve.  A few survive longer and would be on the right side of the bell curve, and a few die sooner, putting them on the left side of the bell curve.  In Pepper's case, given the severity of her symptoms, Dr. Wininger said she would already be starting out on the left side of the curve ... if she could survive surgery.

And that was only if it was a meningioma.  It was more likely -- in fact, a 50% to 70% greater likelihood -- to be the choroid plexus tumor, meaning the survival time is measured in only a few months.

I talked through all this several times with Dr. Wininger this afternoon after reviewing the MRI images.  Then I called Alayne to tell her everything I had learned.  After three long, painful and tearful conversations, Alayne and I finally decided we wouldn't put Pepper through this.  We don't mind the 20% chance of surviving the surgery, but then only to have the tumor come back ... we just couldn't see doing that to her.

Dr. Wininger said the surgery, intensive post-operative care, and month-long radiation therapy would have cost between $8,000 and $10,000 ... but I can tell you that the cost did not factor into the decision.  Had it been a $2,000 operation, we would have reached the same conclusion.  Because of the sanctuary's compassionate and generous donors, we are blessed that we don't have to make medical decisions like this based on cost -- only on what is best for the animal.

I told Dr. Wininger that we would let Pepper go.  He left me alone in an exam room to cry while they went to get Pepper and wheel her in.  When I saw her on the gurney, I knew we had made the right decision.  She was still comatose, and more than two hours after the MRI, she still had not recovered from the anesthesia.  In fact, she was unable to breathe on her own.  I don't know if she knew I was there, but I stroked her face and held her paws in my hands while I cried over our little blind girl.  And then I told her how sorry we were.  I was still holding her paws when she slipped away.

Goodbye, Pepper.  We love you, honey.

Pepper And Her Neurologist

Pepper_with_dr_wininger

I met with Pepper's neurologist, Dr. Fred Wininger, at WSU's veterinary teaching hospital a short while ago to review his initial assessment of Pepper. She is, he said, "a very sick girl." Dr. Wininger spoke this morning with our primary care vet, Dr. Brenda Culver, about the sequence of events leading up to the seizures, the diagnostic tests Brenda and her husband Britt, our internist, had conducted, and the nature of the seizures they witnessed Pepper having. As a result, we are going to proceed with an MRI today at 12:30 Pacific time, and Dr. Wininger will have the images to evaluate about an hour later. He will also do a spinal tap to see what her cerebral spinal fluid tells us.

However, because she is already suffering from significant neurological deficits, she is at risk from the anesthesia required for the MRI and spinal tap procedure. Yet without doing those, we won't know what she has and what we can do for her, so it's a risk we have to take.

He said there are a number of things that could be causing Pepper's problems, and even an intercranial tumor might be operable ... but it's just too soon to know. Although we can't get our hopes up, given her condition, Dr. Wininger said it's not hopeless or he wouldn't recommend moving forward with the MRI.

Dr. Wininger was also the neurologist who last year worked on Claude, our blind Great Dane puppy who had wobblers syndrome, so we know him very well and were very happy to see him take on Pepper's case. I took the photo this morning of Dr. Wininger with Pepper in the ICU.

I'll post more when we have more information on her condition.

Pepper: Holding On

Dsc_0102_2

I arrived at Washington State University's veterinary teaching hospital at 2:30 a.m. last night. When I had picked Pepper up at our vet clinic in Helena about 8 p.m., she was completely out of it ... from a combination of the drugs to control her seizures and, I'm afraid, from what the seizures have done to her brain. She was still completely gorked when we got to the hospital in Pullman. She continued to twitch throughout the trip, not quite real seizures but still evidence of misfiring in her brain. In Kellogg, Idaho, I pulled over at 1 a.m. to give her one of the injections of valium that our internist in Helena, Dr. Britt Culver, had equipped me with for the journey.

It was a beautiful night for a drive across the Rockies ... clear skies, stars, and the snowy mountains glistening in the bright moonlight. Yet all I could think about was the blind dog laying on the stretcher behind me, with her life teetering in the balance. As the miles wore on, I continued to reach back every ten minutes or so and touch Pepper to see if she was still breathing.

A fourth-year vet student, Alaina, helped me carry Pepper in from the truck on our stretcher when I got here. That's Alaina you see in the photo above, along with Dr. Chad O'Brien, the emergency vet on duty last night. Her vital signs were not good ... rapid heart rate and a temperature -- again -- of 105. Dr. O'Brien's goal was to get Pepper stable once more and get her through the night until the neurologists could assess her this morning.

Dr. O'Brien just called and said Pepper's temperature has come down but she is still essentially comatose, which he felt by now could no longer be explained by the medications she is on. So I am heading over to the hospital to meet with the neurologists. This is where I will be spending a good part of the day ... in the lobby of the teaching hospital while I wait to see how our girl is doing. Please keep her in your thoughts. It doesn't look good at the moment.

Wsu_lobby

February 20, 2008

Terrible Setback on Pepper

I'm leaving right now for Helena this evening to pick up blind Pepper at our vet clinic and rush her to Washington State University's veterinary teaching hospital tonight.  Pepper began having seizures yesterday about 6:30 p.m. -- this after healing up from her abscess and being ready to come home.  Pepper seemed to respond to medications last night but the seizures resumed today and have been uncontrollable.  Brenda kept me posted throughout the day, and this evening called to say that Britt had consulted with neurologists at WSU and they recommended we bring Pepper over as fast as possible.  So I am heading to Helena first to get her, then turn around and drive over to Pullman.  I won't get there until 1 or 2 a.m., so I will post another blog update tomorrow as soon as we know more.

Please keep our sweet blind Shepherd in your thoughts.