• 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.

Ignorant

Alana

Well-known member
I was at the vet today as Bella has hemorrhagic gastroenteritis - again, and a lady brought her elderly cavalier in (she is 12 years old!). I said "Your dog looks very calm and happy" and she said that her dog was in about an infection in her eye. Anyway, I started talking about SM and she said she didn't know much about it so I told her about it. Since her dog had never had any symptoms of the disease I asked her about her breeder etc.

Also I was searching on an Australian forum and read this from a breeder:

"SM is not common is Australia"

This was amongst many other such ignorant statements.

It would be lovely to live in a country that does not have a high incidence of SM, however that is not reality for the CKCS owner. I believe Breeders here want us to believe this so that we don't request parent MRI tests and I think everyone else turns a blind eye and doesn't look into symptoms because they don't want to believe their family member has this disease or they can't be bothered paying for medication and tests.

Sorry if this is against the rules!
 
I was at the vet today as Bella has hemorrhagic gastroenteritis - again, and a lady brought her elderly cavalier in (she is 12 years old!). I said "Your dog looks very calm and happy" and she said that her dog was in about an infection in her eye. Anyway, I started talking about SM and she said she didn't know much about it so I told her about it. Since her dog had never had any symptoms of the disease I asked her about her breeder etc.

Also I was searching on an Australian forum and read this from a breeder:

"SM is not common is Australia"

This was amongst many other such ignorant statements.

It would be lovely to live in a country that does not have a high incidence of SM, however that is not reality for the CKCS owner. I believe Breeders here want us to believe this so that we don't request parent MRI tests and I think everyone else turns a blind eye and doesn't look into symptoms because they don't want to believe their family member has this disease or they can't be bothered paying for medication and tests.

Sorry if this is against the rules!

Hai
Kal
Jak
 
I don't think this is particularly an Australian problem. I think in most countries of the world, you can safely say that as far as SM is concerned, some vets are ignorant, some breeders are in denial and some pet owners are clueless. Fortunately not all... But it's sad to think of the Cavaliers out there who are living in pain because of this situation.

Kate, Oliver and Aled
 
I can honestly say that until I was looking for Max I knew nothing about SM. When I got Mindy in 1998 I think only MVD was regularly tested for. Even knowing what I know now I can say that she never exhibited any symptoms at all. Until her cancer at age 11 she was a bouncy happy girl. I think when you have a healthy dog you don't necessarily go looking for what could go wrong.
 
Oh I hear you Alana! The same thing happened to me a few months back....but with a breeder of Cavaliers I met in the dog park! I was so upset by the whole thing, she actually said we did not have SM in Australia because of quarantine :confused: WHA?! I was like "you don't catch SM like a cold"!! At the end of talking to a wall, I just had to walk away because I did not want to get angry. But it is a problem that does exist, two cavvies just down the street from me are severely affected and Brooklyns neuro here in Sydney says that in Australia it is apx. 50-70% (diagnosed and undiagnosed). So yeah, it does hurt to hear those things...which is why it is always important for us to mention it in conversations with friends, people looking to buy a dog, people who already own one. Only we can be the voice of the cavalier, and like you did with the woman at the vet, I always try to bring it up in conversation just to spread the word and point them to a lot of the website resources for info.

I also get stopped a lot with Brooklyn, people wanting one, and I usually go into the whole thing or give them my email...just in case that is one more person who can help change this landscape.

You are right to feel frusterated. It is such a mind boggling thing and feeling that way just shows how much you care.
 
Countries will have different rates of SM according to what cavaliers were exported from the UK in the past.

Some countries seemed to be badly hit before it became so widespread in this country, probably because they had a much smaller cavalier population that was very closely linebred to 80s and 90s UK imports that carried the SM genes.

Now, with the condition so prevalent in our stock, & unscanned UK cavaliers being sold all over the world and being used for breeding, SM will rapidly become common in every country
 
The people saying it isn't common in Australia are Breeders. I will do the same Kelsey.
 
The most ignorant misconception I have heard a couple of times about Cavalier health issues is the one that goes 'I needn't worry about inherited disease because my dog is Kennel Club registered'.

There is another much more recent one though, much more tragic. A man whose house and garden backs onto mine purchased two litter sister Dacshounds last year. The front of his house opens out into the local dog exercising field, which is widely used. I had a long hard look at him because his dogs kept escaping and coming down the road and into my front garden. I lost count of the number of times I used spare leads to take them home. I asked the man if he would like his dogs to come into my garden to play with the Cavaliers. He told me 'no way - they're pedigree'. I let the comment go. Then he told me they have never been to see the vet because they have pedigree certificates and are also KC registered. It wasn't really my business but I was worried about the dogs contracting infectious diseases. I picked up some leaflets from the vet about vaccination and the importance of regular worming and vet checks, put them through his letter box and left it at that.

A few days ago I was told both dogs caught Parvo and died. The price of ignorance is high

.
 
Bella had her 3rd shot today and I carried her in her crate. There was a man with a 'puggle' puppy at about 8 weeks there. His puppy was on the floor on a leash. I am not sure if it was for 1st vaccination or second but I wouldn't be putting my pup on the floor of the vets. I did write about this on the Australian pedigree forum (that's not the name of it) and they said I was ridiculous and that all their pups go to the vet on a leash and said that crates at the vet are for cats.
 
Gosh, I don't really know the medically right thing to do, but my vet always told me to hold Brooklyn (not put her on the floor of the waiting room) until she got all of her shots...so that is what I did and Brooky was never on the vet floor until after her third vaccine (now she is and no worries). There is nothing wrong with bringing Bella in a crate to the vet, now or forever, so I think regardless you are just fine :) but I tend to agree that you should protect them that bit until they are older. I did not know this when I first brought Brooky in at 12 weeks, and I was about to put her down and the nurse came flying round the corner to scoop her up...not that they would catch anything she said, but better safe that sorry.
 
Back
Top