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by 1GSD1 on 26 February 2012 - 14:02
by Barenfell on 26 February 2012 - 16:02
As mentioned Albon is most often used for coccidia infections...there is also a product called Kocci-Free that worked for one of my dogs with a persistent recurring case of coccidia. Take a stool sample right away to rule out other things, like giardia, but then again in 3-4 days after the diarrhea starts for the highest chance of getting a positive fecal for coccidia. Many people immediately run the first stool in and then get a false negative result on the coccidia.
If your pup has been on antibiotics in the past, or has poor digestion due to impending EPI (endocrine pancreatic insufficiency) it could very well have Small Intestinal Bacteria Overgrowth (SIBO). It occurs when the normal friendly flora (Lactobacillus/Bifidobacter strains) are too low and pathogenic strains start colonizing the small intestine...which in turns causes inflammation (sometimes linked to IBD) and urgent, very smelly diarrhea. Metronidazole (Flagyl) and Tylosin (Tylan) are effective for controling the bacteria involved in SIBO, but unless your dog has a good bacterial balance to begin with, many times it will come back unless you give lactic-acid producing strains of probiotics. The lactic-acid strains in the probiotic help to change the intestinal pH balance to a more natural level, thereby inhibiting the overgrowth of the pathogenic strains. Your vet can check the blood serum levels for cobalamin and folate to help determine if you're dealing with SIBO...its a fasting test.
EPI stools will look undigested and oily, since fats are the hardest for them to digest. They will also be yellowish in color. The test for EPI is called a TLI, it is also a fasting test, so the TLI/cobalamin/folate are often done together. Check the EPI4dogs site for good insight into this disease. http://epi4dogs.com/
IMO, the longer the diarrhea goes on, the more damage done to the mucosal lining of the intestine. This can result in malabsorption of nutrients, as well as allergies or food intolerances due to the inflammation causing gaps between the barrier cells.
I would not keep flipping around on foods, unless you suspect a food intolerance...then switch to a single, simple novel protein diet. Follow the 4R approach...Remove, replace, restore, repair. Remove pathogens/treat disease processes. Settle on an easy to digest diet with enzymes if required. Rebuild the intestinal flora. Repair damage to the intestinal lining. Refer to the article on Holistic Approaches to Inflammatory Bowel Disease from the 2007 North American Veterinary Conference. http://www.ivis.org/docarchive/proceedings/NAVC/2007/SAE/018.pdf
I am not a vet, so you need to do your own research and sit down and have a heart-to-heart with your vet...or find one that is experienced dealing with digestive issues. Two months is too long to be guessing at what's wrong.
by Nans gsd on 26 February 2012 - 16:02
PS: In order to get a TRUE definitive answer to any stool sample OR blood workup everything you have been giving her needs to be completely out of her system. Sometimes that takes a while, so in the meantime the PLAIN pumpkin in the can might help, yogart if she can tolerate dairy and if she can't tolerate dairy I would use probiotics from a health food store (chilled section) and keep refrigerated by the way, not petsmart crap, human grade good stuff. Then you know what quality you are getting, the pet industry are not known to have GOOD quality med's or supplements for animals, I mean my gosh that might help cure something. BOL Nan

by Eldee on 26 February 2012 - 17:02
by joanro on 26 February 2012 - 18:02

by EuroShepherd on 26 February 2012 - 19:02
If I suspect a protozoan infection (like coccidia or giardia) I use Ponazuril too, much more effective than Albon, some cases need metronidazole in addition to ponazuril for giardia.
Find one dog food and stick with it. Maybe find one with few ingredients, one source of protein and one source of carbs.
feeding plain canned pumpkin (with no sugar, spices, etc.) mixed with plain raw organic yoghurt (hard to find raw tho) (and add pre-biotics and pro-biotics) and some ginger can help too.
Juiced wheatgrass isn't just for people, the live enzymes in the raw juiced wheatgrass can be very beneficial to carnivore's digestive systems too.
What form of tylosin did your vet give you? If it was liquid form then that's practicly useless for your situation. I've always had extremely good results using Tylan powder.

by Eldee on 26 February 2012 - 21:02

by trixx on 26 February 2012 - 22:02

by trixx on 26 February 2012 - 22:02
by 1GSD1 on 27 February 2012 - 02:02
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