Healthcommunities.com
Home Search SiteMap Forum Videos Pet Store Review Board

Can the dog get distemper from the clinic?

Post a new topicby hyeminin on Mon May 18, 2009 9:33 pm

I bought my puppy when she was 2 months old. She was healthy, playful and ate really well (3 times a day). I took her to the vet for the first time when she was about 2 1/2mon. to start her vaccinations. After her vaccination she had the normal signs, but after about 3-4 days she started to have discharge from her nose and watery eyes and sneezing. I thought she had a cold and called the docter and took her back in. They gave her some antbiotics because she seemed to be have a respiratory infection.

I suggested to the doctor that it must have something to do with the vaccination, but she said it would only show signs on the first 24hours. I did not think anything serious was happening. She started to have diarrea and would not eat, but luckly she eventually got better and ate really well, until, she went back to the vet and got her second shot. About 4 days later she stop eating and she started twitching (now I look at it, it looks more like seizing). I suggested again to the doctor that it seems weird that she only got seek after she went to the vet clinic and her vaccination first time and the second time.

I have now spent about 6-8 hundred dollars on tests and things, now, a day after I spent the money the vet hands me this info paper about distemper which has all the symptoms I discribed to her from the days after the first time visiting her clinic and getting her first shots. How could she have not notice this and given her the second shots.

My puppy is the joy of my life and she is now really sick, she can't seem to keep her body up, but she still wants to play and trys to bring the toy to me. I am so angry and sad that I can't do anything about this.....

Any suggestions to how to help her would be appreciated. I am force feeding her at the moment and trying ot make her drink water.
Facebook Twitter
hyeminin
 
Posts: 2 | Joined: Mon May 18, 2009 9:12 pm

Re: Can the dog get distemper from the clinic?

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Fri May 22, 2009 12:45 am

Hi hyeminin,

First that VET is totally ignorant, and the answers it gave is not even correct at all.

Secondly what you have is called Vaccination induced Distemper.

You need to get to my site ASAP and go to caninedistemper dot proboards dot com and speak to me there as I can get you to a VET right away and save your dog.

There is a full cure for this disease and trust me it is authentic and medically proven.

The amount of money you have spent is ridiculous so stop paying that VET any further and prepare your suit against her and to the drug manufacturers pertaining to the vaccines itself.

Third, I can link you completely up and you can get the treatment done and be out of the woods.
That is the VET, the Vaccine, the treatment, the CSF tap and the after care which is my job.

I am an expert on this disease and work along with several other experts and together we are forming our group.

Hurry and you have no time to waste

Daveyo
Facebook Twitter
Daveyo
 
Posts: 822 | Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2007 7:16 am

Re: Can the dog get distemper from the clinic?

Post a new topicby hyeminin on Fri May 22, 2009 4:14 am

Hello everyone,
My baby puppy died on the 20th of May. I could not stop crying. She went in to her seizures and never recovered. I took her to the emergency room, it happened so fast, I couldn't even properly say goodbye. To those who has a dog with this disease, please hold your dog and love it as often as much as you can because when and if the time comes, you wished that you held her longer.

Thank you for listening.

I don't know how this even happened, or why, but it just seems so unfair. Please be extra cautious where you let your dog play for the first 6months.

If he/she has the disease, I have read that there are many different vitamine pills to boost her immune system; keep her warm (do not bath/wet her), get some anti-convulsion meds before she starts seizing; make sure to treat all the repiratory and other side symptoms; don't leave her alone too long (to avoid unnecessary stress); do not force feed her (it needs to cleanse her intestens); let her rest and always be calm around her. I have also read that giving her yogurt to boost good bacteria in her digestive system helps. Do not try to give her all kinds of variety of food to boost her appetite; this will make her eat, but her body might not digest it. Just always keep the food you always feed her/him sitting out. Get a small serenge to make sure she/he drinks plenty of fluids.

My dog got to the neurological disease and this is why she died. Try to keep her calm as possible and if she starts twitching or seizing, just hold her and love her. She does not have much time; when it is at this stage, be ready to let her go.

I hope this helps. I researched for two days, and this is what I found.
Facebook Twitter
hyeminin
 
Posts: 2 | Joined: Mon May 18, 2009 9:12 pm

Re: Can the dog get distemper from the clinic?

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Fri May 22, 2009 7:02 am

Hello

My condolences to you and your beloved Pet. In any rate could you please spare yourself a little time and go to my site and register there. I want you to see the information and the cure for this disease and hopefully it can come in handy should it happen again. You need to understand it clearly.

First Vitamins has absolutely no effect to the disease, as that will not cure it. You are dealing with a virus and not something like a small bacterial infection. This virus does not play games or choose which one. It attacks any dog not vaccinated and can remain alive airborne for 20 miles, and also any dog with a immune compromised system it will have what is called a vaccine induced Distemper, courtesy of the MLV Distemper and Parvo being together!!!!

There are certain tests just 3 of them that is needed for me to know if your dog is vulnerable to vaccine induced Distemper before you even give the shots!!!. Why these VETS do not know this is beyond me and I think they are horribly undereducated. Most of the VETS today do not even understand biology!!!!!!! and cannot even do a very simple test such as a bladder smear test using diff quick to see the distemper cells inside of 30 minutes. They are so ill informed about this disease it boggles the mind how they ever got that degree in the first place.

Also yogurt has nothing to do with it either. As you can see from what you have read you got bitten really bad from very poor advice and that is from homeopathic and herbal remedies which is the pits of the business itself and they are total fakes.

No you don't let your dog go, even at that stage you get that dog treated immediately and I have the resources and the network that assists people who need this help and the cure is genuine.

Why is it genuine - because I got 3 dogs here living with me today fully cured of this disease and two of them were at deaths door before I finally discovered the CNS cure and it stops the progression and allows the dogs to fully recover. I closed the final loophole myself back in 2007!!!.

Just five days ago a dog completely blind, was having severe neurological symptoms was treated. Today the symptoms are abating and now can see again 50% already and on the road to full recovery!!!!! Yes that member is in my site as well. They listened to me, got the dog treated and I provided them the resources of where to go and get it treated. Said and done and another dog owner happy.

There was another one but her boyfriend and the VET kept stalling her and kept preventing her from treating her dog, and it died on May 20th, and she too is grieving her heart out badly.

I feel so bad for you but the rest was up to you to initiate the emergency response and I could have gotten you taken care of. If you want take the time and sue that VET for a bad mis-diagnosis go ahead. Maybe this might be their wake up call.

Good luck and hope to see you at my site if you have the time.

Daveyo
Facebook Twitter
Daveyo
 
Posts: 822 | Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2007 7:16 am