Re: Another Newbie trying to figure out what to do
Hi Gail(?) and welcome to you and Lucy!
From the description I would say Cushing's is a definite possibility and I agree with Lori on the testing preferred for a dog who's stressed just going to the clinic. The ultrasound can go a long way toward determining which form is in play - adrenal or pituitary. The vast majority of cush pups have the pituitary form and it is the easiest to treat with the best prognosis. The US can also find other issues that may be causing the changes in behavior and any abnormal lab results...such as a tumor, or liver damage, etc. So the US can be invaluable. I credit that test with saving my Squirt's life...it found a tumor on her spleen.
If the mobile vet has the ability to do the testing required I would try that route. But another option is to ask the vet to allow you to keep her outside between the draw times. The ACTH will take about an hour...she will have a blood draw followed by an injection. Then about an hour later she will have another blood draw. Some folk have been able to have the vet come out to their car to do the draws and injections...but not all vets are as understanding. It can help a great deal tho if she can leave the clinic when they aren't work with her so I would insist this be allowed to lower the risk of a false positive. For the US they can lightly sedate her so she won't be as upset. It is a non-invasive test but the pup needs to be still so many are sedated for this test.
And a bit of information in case she does test positive...the starting dose of Vetoryl/Trilostane for a dog her size is 1mg/lb. So if she weighs 10 lbs the starting dose should be a maximum of 10mg per day.
I'm sure you're overwhelmed by now so this is a good place to stop. If you have any concerns or questions please let us know. We have all walked in your shoes and understand what others might see as "helicoptering".
I was a twitcher...getting anxious if a hair got out of place! LOL
Glad to have you and Lucy in the family here at K9C!
Hugs,
Leslie
"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.