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Abby is sickI have been told that my 16 week old malti-poo puppy has distemper. She was vaccinted by the breeder and then the second dose by my vet. However, about a month ago she got a fever, quit eating, got an upper resperatory infection, then pnuemonia. The vet put her on antibiotics and gave her an IV. She seemed to recover until a few days ago and she started stumbling. Took her back to the vet and they said it is distemper She is still eating, peeing, and pooping. Her runny nose and cough have come back. I talked to another vet last night. She asked if Abby has had a sezure - no
has she had tremors - no and has she had the gum chewing - no. In that case the vet said that no nuerological damage had occured and she has a chance of recovery. I am not so sure about that. Abby is stumbling more and I don't think she is seeing that well. Is all lost for this sweet baby? I have been reading other posts about NDV. Am I supposed to administer it? Can I get the vet to get the NDV and administer it? I live in Houston Texas and I am not sure the vets here will be open to this Any thoughts are appreciated. ajab in houston
Re: Abby is sickHi Ajab
I am Daveyo. I read your story, and you have a chance to save your dog but you must act quickly. You mentioned your in Houston, as I have an associate in Georgia who can be quite helpful but you have to go to her because she has a VET who can do the body injection and the CNS tap injection. In concern of your dog you have to get NDV as soon as you can and get the medical procedures done ASAP. Right now your dog is undergoing what is called the paralytic phase, meaning paralysis. Your in the beginning stages of it right now and in about 2 weeks that dog will not be able to get up at all. I have a dog here with me who became completely paralyzed by this disease, and did the NDV-CSF tap injection, and today is running around, jumping and pesters me constantly for attention. Sigh, and I also have another dog who had full blown ODE Seizures, and is doing just fine today and definitely is like a Sherlock Holmes, as he loves to investigate my shoes and pants etc, and items around here, and even unties my sneekers wanting to see what is inside the sneeker etc. Skippy is quite a dog if I may say so. The disease being Distemper you have is now ongoing, and the VET is dead wrong as it is now inside the CNS. It is also in the body destroying the internal organs bit by bit. Soon your dog is going to have Full blown ODE of paralysis, which will cause the dog to stop breathing because the virus will suffocate your dog completely. If you act now and get to Pip Carrington in Atlanta Georgia area, she will take you under her wing and get you taken care of right away. The cure for the body is based on the weight of the animal and the Dx is 0.1cc per pound. A 10 pound dog will get 1.0cc of NDV. This is given direct to the blood vein on the front leg. So weigh your dog and inject the NDV. It will cure the body portion of the dog in 24 hours. In the meantime give your dog Baytril of 0.5cc and Penicilling G of 1.0cc mixed together and put it to the muscles of the dog. The Dx is every 12 hours for 7 days of that amount. This will cure the Pneumonia on your dog as it is always with Distemper. At the same token the NDV-CSF tap has to be done and this is based on the size of the animal at time of tap. 0.1cc for a toy dog, 0.2cc for a small dog, 0.3cc for a medium size, 0.4cc for a large dog and 0.5cc for a giant. Based on size of the animal. Do not use diluent involving the tap. Use Saline, as this will not cause phenolic shock. OK You need to have a qualified person to do this tap to the animal. Pip has that VET for you. Go straight to her and get it done ASAP. You also need to find my site in the search engine. Look for CanineDistemper and also look for proboards as my number is 60 and you should find me. As usual register and then get in and you will see a wealth of information pertaining to this disease and a complete medical protocol detailing step by step for the VET and the success is 99.9% if followed as it is stated. If you need further assistance you can write to me here or at my site either way and I will do my best for you Daveyo
Re: Abby is sickDaveyo,
Thank you for posting back to me. I did email Pippit but I did not get her email with vets name in time. Abby died a couple of weeks ago. I could not bring myself to post again until now. We only had sweet Abby for 2 months but she was a love. By the end she could not walk. This was probably a case of a sick pupy from the beginning. I got her from a guy in the paper and never saw the mother dog. I had something in writing that she had her first shots, but who really knows? I will never get a dog from the paper again. The vets here in Houston are seeing a lot of distemper. The vet at the hospital says that she sees at least one case a week. Texas A & M University has one of the best vet schools in the country. I wish we could get them to take a look at your results. We need to do something about this horrible disease. ajab
Re: Abby is sickHi Ajab
My condolences to you and your family at your loss. Sigh. Also my associate has been ill for the last week or so herself so she is kinda under the weather so to speak. Hmmmm, interesting to know Houston is having a Distemper problem and yet so many thumb up their noses with the official cure of Dr. Sears and mine claiming we are voodoo Drs. Well if I may suggest something to you and perhaps you can sort of join the parade of mine that seems to be getting more and more results and that is having people participate in getting the word out and doing some talking to these VETS and influential people who can turn things around. First start with this VET at that hospital, and present her our cure and diagnostic method to make sure it is Distemper. Why, because Respiratory Herpes mimics this disease so this VET has to do this test to split it and then confirm if it is Distemper. Upon confirmation if no other clinical signs are obviously present, then the VET can proceed on the medical protocol and they themselves can watch the incredible results right before their very own eyes. As long as they do not deviate from the protocol they will be very successful on the future cases and many can be cured. With this VET seeing the results, I am sure this VET will also pass it on to her associates in the same profession. With this VET now seeing the official results themselves, then you and that VET can go to Texas A & M and present this to the animal board there and have them try it out themselves and let them see the results as well. The bottom line is the more who at least try it out and see for themselves the cure for these dogs the better the odds will be that many will also participate and form a community to pressure the VET Licensing Board to at least get it written into the books so other VETS can start without any fear and then these animals can be cured. This applies to all animal species and even mammals in the water as well. So these field VETS need to buckle their belt up one notch and say ok lets give it a try. It does not hurt them at all and if they follow it precisely, then they can say the cure is not a joke and its for real. Once they see this with their own two eyes, and the evidence is right before them the live animal being cured officially, I am sure that they will comply and try to help people save their dogs and join the parade I have started in trying to get a community of VETS to participate in this cure. It is people like you and others who are willing to spare some of their precious time to get the word out and knock on a few VET clinics and explain to them about the cure and you can give them my website on the search engine which is caninedistemper dot proboards sixty dot com and they can check it out themselves. There is nothing wrong from getting a dog from the paper or some ad or from some pet place. The real key to all this have the animal immediately be checked for this particular disease and have the VET do the diagnostic protocol. If you catch it early you can avoid a lot of problems. Then the VET can check the rest which is the stools, its overall health, doing a full CBC test and check for PARVO as well. Since now you know what Distemper can do to an animal best you study it a bit more so you can recognize the sympthoms quickly. This is equally important as the same for the treatment to this disease. Keep in mind Respiratory Herpes and Distemper both have high fevers and both will cause pneumonia. The real key is the brush border bladder smear test which can tell the VET what the dog has. If no inclusions showing the carmine red cells, then it has Respiratory Herpes. If those cells show the carmine red and para nuclear in that slide, then it confirms Distemper. It is quick and easy and that VET can know in 30 minutes during your visit. Then the VET can administer the NDV body shot right away. The dog is cured in 24 hours and please remember it will be feeling like sh*t because it was sick so give it another 24 hours and that dog should be up and moving about normally again. Then if this disease is past the 6 days then you have to do the NDV-CSF tap to get rid of it in the CNS region because that virus will breach the spinal blood brain barrier beginning day 7 onward. OK. The brush border smear test and giving that NDV body shot is not expensive at all. Very quick and both can be done on that visit and out the door for that visit. The one that can be expensive is the CSF tap because this one is the most dangerous medical procedure as that needle if put in the wrong way can cause complications to the animal or even kill the animal. So that is why the Ultra Sound is highly recommended and it provides the CSF tap procedure to be much safer and avoid these complications. If that needle is inserted properly, then the rest is academic and just follow the medical protocol and it is done rather quickly. All one has to do is wait until the animal wakes up and observe its recovery. If it can stand on all four legs and wag that tail and is steady, the procedure went smoothly and that animal is then officially cured from the disease once and for all. It will not need another Distemper vaccine shot for the rest of its life as the titer count will be very high 1/1600. It will take many years for it to come down. Under normal vaccinations the titer counts is 1/20 to 1/40!!!!!! OK so take note on the numbers itself. As to the rest of the vaccination protocol it still has to be followed once every 3 years. When the shots are given make sure the VET weighs that dog. If it is less than 60 pounds, give only half shots at a time, and not full shots. A full shot is for a 60 pound dog or bigger. Many VETS will not tell you this and neither will the drug manufacturer tell you. Yes the VET knows this coming from the drug maker. It is one of their secrets so to speak. So first give the half shot and wait 14 days. Then you give the other half shot and then it is done and the dog has one full shot with no adverse effects. By doing this you will not insult the immune system of the animal. Anyway, again my condolences to you and stay in touch and keep trying to raise up PIP ok. You need her assistance as well. Daveyo
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