Re: 6 y/o cockapoo Bonnie recently diagnosed
Hi Andrea,
Welcome to you and your sweet girl.
I want to second what Lori said about this starting dose....it is too high and could cause problems. Dechra, the drug's manufacturer, says to start at the LOWEST dose possible and for a dog of 18 lbs that is 1mg per pound...and that is in their literature for anyone to read.
Any higher than 20mg per day is putting your baby at risk and costing you more to boot. I would INSIST the vet give her no more than 20 mg a day. That would be 2- 10mg tablets either both in the am or 10mg am and 10mg pm. BUT this is the least of the problems....
Your baby has very few signs of Cushing's and the lab work is not conclusive at all...for any dog not just yours. This is a sign-driven disease, meaning the signs are just as important as the numbers and sometimes more important. The ACTH and the LDDS, the two blood tests for Cushing's, can easily return false positives if any other health issue is present...such as a urinary tract infection or digestive issues or infection. I know - I've had two dogs misdiagnosed. The second one only had the ACTH and her results was >50. She did NOT have Cushing's tho....she had a host of other issues (including colitis which causes bloody stools) and her necropsy (autopsy for animals) showed normal adrenal glands proving she did not have the disease (she was not treated at the time because I had stopped treatment a while before she passed from an inguinal hernia). Neither the ACTH nor the LDDS are fool-proof but the LDDS is considered the gold standard for diagnosing Cushing's. FYI...my first pup had a tumor on her spleen which caused false positives on the ACTH, LDDS, HDDS, and UTK panel. Once the tumor was removed all those tests returned normal levels of cortisol. It was the stress of the tumor that caused her cortisol to rise NATURALLY in response. Same with my other baby who registered >50...stress caused a false positive on the ACTH. Cortisol is a fight or flight hormone and it's job is to rise in the face of any stress to help the body cope. It is the same in humans.
About the ultrasound...it will have little value for diagnosing Cushing's if the dog is already on treatment because the treatment will cause the adrenals to return to a more normal appearance UNLESS the tumor(s) are on one or both adrenal glands. It will have value as far as looking for tumors, etc. but little to none for diagnosing Cushing's once the pup is on medication to reduce the cortisol. If there was a tumor present or some other issue with an internal organ that could impact the ACTH so that would have some value. It was the US that saved my first pup's life by finding that tumor. Not only could it have ruptured but had I started treatment without being aware of it the treatment could have made her very very sick - or worse. So the US definitely has value but it should be done during the diagnostic phase and not after treatment has started.
My Squirt, first one misdiagnosed, did eventually develop Cushing's and she was 7 at the time. She passed at the age of 16+ WITH Cushing's not FROM it and I had stopped treatment for her a year earlier due to her age and dementia. Our cush pups can do live out their normal lifespan IF correctly treated and none of the uncommon complications arise. So don't despair about the time you may have left just yet...the picture is far from clear for your sweet Bonnie.
I, too, am very glad you found us and look forward to learning more soon.
Hugs,
Leslie
ps...I hope this makes a little sense; I am writing in a rush unfortunately.
"May you know that absence is full of tender presence and that nothing is ever lost or forgotten." John O'Donahue, "Eternal Echoes"
Death is not a changing of worlds as most imagine, as much as the walls of this world infinitely expanding.