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by Nans gsd on 07 May 2016 - 00:05

by bubbabooboo on 07 May 2016 - 03:05
I have used it ( Adequan ) and perhaps a little improvement but very little or none in dogs. How to use it and the high cost is a mystery as there are some generic brands ( Korean ) as well. The horse users report better results but inject it right into the joint which seems a bit risky with dogs so I give it at least close to the affected joint. For the cost of Adequan and a vet visit you can buy your dog several sides of beef ribs instead if a vet prescribes or gives it to your dog. The rehab vets are kinda luke warm ( they damn it with faint praise ) on Adequan when asked about it so I think they won't advise against as it is not likely to do harm ( worst case ). Adequan is made from the cow's trachea tissue and all of the muscles and connective tissues involved in swallowing and breathing so I think a few racks of beef or pork ribs will accomplish the same thing and I think your dog will agree they'll feel better after some ribs than after an injection. There are lots of connective tissues and muscles in a rack of ribs as well as bone marrow plus they get cleaner teeth and meaty breath. After trying Adequan I have just decided to give my limping dogs some better food and rest and forget the Adequan as I have seen little improvement from it other than the dog stops limping when he thinks he is going to get an injection ( yes they are that smart ). When they see you with a needle in hand suddenly their leg feels better until you go away with the syringe.
by hexe on 07 May 2016 - 03:05
Worked best as a first line of treatment when dogs were still in their mid-life years, before moving up to anti-inflammatories; once they were into their senior years [10+], I found it to be of lesser efficacy, and at that point made the switch to NSAIDs, plus or minus other meds [tramadol, gabapentin, etc.]

by Dawulf on 07 May 2016 - 04:05

by bubbabooboo on 07 May 2016 - 05:05
The Korean version is about 50% less expensive than Adequan.
by hexe on 07 May 2016 - 05:05

by Dawulf on 07 May 2016 - 06:05
Sub-Q. A pinch between the shoulders. It was the weirdest thing. Jen said she did them on her before, and originally the vet showed me how so I was doing it... until a month or two into it when she started yelping, and it was getting worse. I started having the vet do it again, but it didn't help, just progressively got worse. IIRC the lasts time or two that the vet did it, she did it IM.
I considered perhaps I was the problem, but I swear I wasn't, it was as routine as I could possibly make it, and hell... she got cheese afterwards, she looked forward to it for awhile. xD
She is doing great on the Vertex though. As long as she is doing well I don't care.
(And on the subject I will say that I will never again order Vertex from Elite K9... One jug arrived completely busted open all over the box it was shipped in, which also had a hole in it, and they refused to do anything except give a slight discount on the next order, after arguing with them for several days over e-mail/phone, making me send picture proof, etc. Not happy with that company at all, so if Vertex is something you want to look into, I'd suggest looking elsewhere.)
by hexe on 07 May 2016 - 06:05
I wasn't thinking you were doing anything wrong, I was just curious about the route of injection simply because a steady, repetitive schedule of even correctly-performed IM injections can eventually lead to inflammation of the nerves, resulting in pain that's not coming from the joint and causing lameness.
This is the first case I've heard or read about where the dog was getting sub-Q injections and having a painful adverse result, though. Certainly could be due to the same issue as with the IM route, I expect...or could be for some completely different reason. Just glad to hear that your girl is comfortable via a different means. :)
by Nans gsd on 08 May 2016 - 18:05

by Dawulf on 09 May 2016 - 03:05
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