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by GinaBel on 02 August 2012 - 02:08
If her albumin is very low..that is the likely cause of her large abdomen, as she probably has ascites (free fluid in her belly). Albumin is a very large blood protein that is needed to maintain fluid within blood vessels. Once albumin starts dropping below 1.5 g/dl, fluid will start to to leak out into body cavities. That is a very serious problem that needs to be addressed by trying to figure out where the protein is going...there are 3 possibilities 1) you are not making albumin...in which case you have serious liver disease, 2) you are losing protein through your urine...something we call glomerulonephrtis. If this is the case then treatment is initiated while an underlying cause for inflammation/infection is found and corrected, 3) you are losing it through your intestinal tract...means serve intestinal disease. None of these are particularly good.
No matter what your dog needs supportive care and further diagnostics to determine the underlying cause. I would attempt to find an Internal medicine specialist. You can find your closest one by going to the website for the American College of Veterinary Internal medicine (www.acvim.org). Hope something is found on your pup quickly. Good luck.
by Shortness on 02 August 2012 - 05:08

by kitkat3478 on 02 August 2012 - 12:08
by Shortness on 02 August 2012 - 22:08

by Jenni78 on 03 August 2012 - 05:08
by hexe on 03 August 2012 - 05:08
Shortness, I'm relieved that you got Gabby into a vet's office that recognized how critical and in need of hospitalization and supportive care she was, and who was able to make a diagnosis. But, as Jenni78 points out, when the patient is a 7 month old puppy, while the liver failure diagnosis and subsequent response to treatment tells you the 'what' as far as your dog's problem, it doesn't answer the question of 'why'. Example: A friend of mine in CA recently related (via email) a similar situation with a dog from a litter she'd breed; this 6 year old, previously active and athletic working-lines GSD went into a rapid decline, just as Gabby has done, and when the dog's owner rushed him into the vet, the only info she had to tell the breeder was that this dog was in acute kidney failure, and the prognosis did not look promising. Again--the 'what' was identified, but there had to be a 'why' for a 6 year old dog that immediately prior to falling ill had been the picture of health.
I suggested that the owner and/or the breeder needed to insist that the vet investigate WHY the dog's kidneys were failing, and ticked off the things that I'd be concerned about if my dog were to become similarly affected. One of those differentials was leptospirosis; few people ever think about the disease, despite the fact that the organism is virtually everywhere, and vaccinating against it fell out of favor with many dog owners a number of years back when the 'vaccinosis' theory became popularized. The breeder passed our email conversation on to the dog's owner, who immediately contacted her vet and asked if the various differentials I'd mentioned had been tested for and ruled out. The dog had not been tested for lepto, and while the vet was skeptical that it was even worth doing, he pulled the necessary samples anyway and sent them out to the lab. The test results indicated an active infection with leptospirosis, the surprised vet modified the treatment the dog was receiving and saw marked improvement; now, several weeks later, the dog is recuperating at home and is nearly back to his pre-illness vigor and attitude. It should also be noted that lepto has zoonotic potential; anyone having contact with the dog's urine can become infected as well, and the family members were all tested as a result, with one person placed on treatment as a precaution due to the test results.
The vet needs to get that part of the puzzle solved as well; it's great that they're more optimistic about her recovery than they were when she was admitted, but organ failure of any type in a dog so young needs to have the cause identified. Hopefully Gabby continues to improve, and the vet uncovers the root of the problem, permitting them to fine-tune the treatment to fit the cause and achieve a complete recovery. You may need to motivate the vet to do more diagnostic work in order to get your question fully answered, though, with that motivation being your persisting in asking 'why' Gabby's liver is compromised and not settling for a vague answer.

by Judy P on 04 August 2012 - 02:08
Here is a link to some info on this problem;http://www.vet.utk.edu/clinical/sacs/shunt/faq.php
by Shortness on 06 August 2012 - 08:08
by joanro on 06 August 2012 - 11:08

by Sunsilver on 06 August 2012 - 12:08
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