• If you're a past member of the board, but can't recall your password any more, you don't need to set up a new account (unless you wish to). As long as you recall your old login name, you can log in with that user name then select 'forgot password' and the board will email you at your registration email, to let you reset your password.

Madison diagnosed through MRI with SM

Thanks for the update. Hope the human baby is here soon and that he or she is healthy, happy and learns fairly soon to sleep through the night. We will keep you and your family, human and canine, in our thoughts and prayers.
 
I just read through this entire thread and wanted to say thank you for posting it and also for being willing to share Madison's story with all of us. I have never dealt with an SM dog as of yet, but thanks to your experience and sharing, if it ever happens I will be much more prepared. I have enjoyed reading Madison's progression and I am glad she seems to be holding her head up more. :) Good luck with the new baby!!! :flwr: You'll have to let us know what he/she is and how he/she is doing!!! :flwr:
 
Okay. We've had a busy few weeks.

Sam was born on April 2. He weighed 7.5 pounds and was 19.75 inches long. He has brown hair and blue eyes. This is him having tummy time a few days later:

http://www.kodakgallery.com/Slidesh...863313.70250963313.1208184348401&conn_speed=1

Madison is doing well and her and Molly are adjusting to having Sam around. They sniffed him and are very interested in his bottles but otherwise ignore him. They're not acting too jealous at this point. We took Madison for her first walk and she was still bunny hopping all over the place.

I took Madison back to Dr. Abramson for her follow-up. She agreed that Madison is doing well and is walking better. As you can see in the slideshow below, her scar has healed up nicely. She's still itching pretty bad. For the itching, she prescribed Gabi--something. All in all, things are going well. Here are some pics of my girls. We like to give poor Molly spiked hair. Madison is the little one.

http://www.kodakgallery.com/Slidesh...863313.72235474313.1208184348400&conn_speed=1
 
Congrats on the new family member!! What an adorable little boy. You have a beautiful family (4 legged and 2 legged members!!) Glad to hear Madison is doing so well.
 
Madison is still doing fine. Her itching is still pretty bad, however. So, we put her on Gabapentin 100mg twice a day. The gabapentin seems to help a lot. She itches for less when she's on it and also seems to sleep more when she's on it (could be relief from the itching). It's just a shame that it wears off so fast--so we can never prevent the itching all the time. I wonder if she'll grow an immunity to the drug over time.
 
Congratulations on your new baby boy!!! :flwr:

Gabapentin usually lasts 8 hours, so she may need 3 doses per day.
 
Congratulations on your new baby boy!!! :flwr:

Gabapentin usually lasts 8 hours, so she may need 3 doses per day.


Thank you. He's a handful. Have you experienced any immunity to gabapentin over time? By the way, I paid $.50 a pill. I'll shop around for the next round.
 
Glad to hear Madison is doing so well. And congratulations on your new baby!

We just upped Spencer's gabapentin dose and he now takes it three times per day. I certainly can't speak from a scientific point of view but I do think he's developed some immunity to it. His disease is also progressing somewhat so it may be a combination of that and the fact that I don't feel the gabapentin provides as much relief as it did in the beginning.
 
Will symptoms always worsen?

Hi all,
I'm probably in denial, but do symptoms necessarily lead to pain and illness?

My 11-month-old redhead does the scratching thing at night, and has done it since she was an infant. She has other occasional symptoms: tail chasing, slightly weak back legs, every once in a while a yelp when picked up. But she is otherwise healthy, happy, and super active.

Do I need to do anything? Is it possible she'll just have these symptoms the rest of her life, but otherwise be fine? Or is it necessarily going to get worse?

And if so, any recommendations for vets in Vermont?

Thanks for any advice,
Rachel
Burlington, Vermont
 
Hi all,
I'm probably in denial, but do symptoms necessarily lead to pain and illness?

My 11-month-old redhead does the scratching thing at night, and has done it since she was an infant. She has other occasional symptoms: tail chasing, slightly weak back legs, every once in a while a yelp when picked up. But she is otherwise healthy, happy, and super active.

Do I need to do anything? Is it possible she'll just have these symptoms the rest of her life, but otherwise be fine? Or is it necessarily going to get worse?

And if so, any recommendations for vets in Vermont?

Thanks for any advice,
Rachel
Burlington, Vermont

Based on my own experience having cavaliers with SM, I would at the very least take her to a neurologist to get a neurology examination and to evaluate her for pain. I would try to find a neurologist experienced with SM. Here are two links for neurologists:
http://cavalierhealth.org/neurologists.htm

http://sm.cavaliertalk.com/diagnosing/diagnosing/neuros.html

If you cannot go out of state for a neurologist, it may be helpful to print documents from these links and take them to your vet. Perhaps your vet could follow the step by step approach: http://sm.cavaliertalk.com/
 
I just found this thread and I have to say I am so happy to find someone this brave and willing to help their cavalier. A big thank you for sharing Madison's treatment step-by-step. I wish all the best to your family (congratulations on the baby!) and of course Madison - I certainly look forward to keeping in check with how she is doing.
 
Do I need to do anything? Is it possible she'll just have these symptoms the rest of her life, but otherwise be fine? Or is it necessarily going to get worse?

In order: yes; not very likely; and yes, almost certainly given her age.

So, please: you do very urgently need to see someone as the things you are seeing indicate that if your dog does have SM she is already experiencing pain (and these are very suspicious symptoms and even if this isn;t SM, really MUST be addressed as they do indiocate some serious problems). Limb weakness in particular is considered a sign of rapidly progressing SM and is *a very serious symptom* -- Dr Clare Rusbridge feels that surgery is probably indicated -- or palliative care -- once limb weakness is there because it indicates a more severe form of the disease. At this point it is urgent to take some decision on the dog's future if you care for her wellbeing and do not want her to suffer unnecessarily, which I am sure is the case -- eg whether to consider surgery or to at least relieve her pain, expressed by these symptoms -- because anything not addressed right away will probably not be alleviated by surgery in the future as damage is generally irreversible.

Dogs under three or so that are symptomatic are generally the most severely affected and should at the very least be assessed and put onto adequate pain relief medication (as noted, scratching, yelping and limb weakness are all signs that the dog is suffering and trying to live with ongoing, already-existing pain. This out of kindness should be addressed).

I urge anyone who wonders whether to do anything because their dog doesn't seem to be showing very many symptoms, to please read some of the human SM sites to get a sense of the severe daily pain most symptomatic sufferers must live with (and how vague their expressed symtpoms are -- how does a dog tell you it has a massive headache?). All the researchers working in this area feel that by the time a dog is showing symptoms, even mild symptoms, it is already experiencing compromising pain. At the very least, there are many medications that could bring a better quality of life, even if only in the short term, to any dog with this condition -- a symptomatic dog IS SUFFERING.

The condition is almost always progressive and any dog showing symptoms under age 3 definitely needs to be assessed.
 
In order: yes; not very likely; and yes, almost certainly given her age.

So, please: you do very urgently need to see someone as the things you are seeing indicate that if your dog does have SM she is already experiencing pain (and these are very suspicious symptoms and even if this isn;t SM, really MUST be addressed as they do indiocate some serious problems). Limb weakness in particular is considered a sign of rapidly progressing SM and is *a very serious symptom* -- Dr Clare Rusbridge feels that surgery is probably indicated -- or palliative care -- once limb weakness is there because it indicates a more severe form of the disease. At this point it is urgent to take some decision on the dog's future if you care for her wellbeing and do not want her to suffer unnecessarily, which I am sure is the case -- eg whether to consider surgery or to at least relieve her pain, expressed by these symptoms -- because anything not addressed right away will probably not be alleviated by surgery in the future as damage is generally irreversible.

Dogs under three or so that are symptomatic are generally the most severely affected and should at the very least be assessed and put onto adequate pain relief medication (as noted, scratching, yelping and limb weakness are all signs that the dog is suffering and trying to live with ongoing, already-existing pain. This out of kindness should be addressed).

I urge anyone who wonders whether to do anything because their dog doesn't seem to be showing very many symptoms, to please read some of the human SM sites to get a sense of the severe daily pain most symptomatic sufferers must live with (and how vague their expressed symtpoms are -- how does a dog tell you it has a massive headache?). All the researchers working in this area feel that by the time a dog is showing symptoms, even mild symptoms, it is already experiencing compromising pain. At the very least, there are many medications that could bring a better quality of life, even if only in the short term, to any dog with this condition -- a symptomatic dog IS SUFFERING.

The condition is almost always progressive and any dog showing symptoms under age 3 definitely needs to be assessed.

You always make me cringe because I start to think that our ignorance and our veternarian's dismissal of this disease for two years meant that our Madison progressed and went untreated in pain for three years and now has irreversible damage. Knowing what I know now, I would go to a neurologist upon any signs. It's quite surprising how cheap a visit to one is. After that, you can make decisions about the much more expensive MRI.
 
Back
Top