White Dog and the rest of the Army long ago had reached the point of hiking over to the vet’s office to rescue their brother and bring him
home. It HAD been a tortuous all day wait. Steve called after four to ask if we
had heard anything and at the “No!” wails of White Dogs announced that he was
just going to go over there and bring Ferguson home because he had class in a
very short time.
We all hung by the phone, waiting for a teleconference
between us, Dr. Julia and Steve but none came. Steve pulled into the drive and
brought Fergus inside. He was very out of it but at least seemed much less
fearful than he did yesterday. We all welcomed our boy home then turned to
Steve expectantly, “Well?’
“There is no well. There was a line out of the door and
everything was crazy. They gave Ferg to me and said Dr. Julia would call you
probably after office hours to powwow.” Then he dashed into now rush hour
traffic to get back to school in time for class.
Ferguson sat in my arms for some time and benignly let his
family come up to him. Then he asked to get down. He curled up on the side of
my chair and slept. Candace and I speculated and waited until she, too had to
leave for work. I prayed we had not been forgotten.
It was nearly seven when Dr. Juia phoned; the WDA arranged
themselves around me so all could hear the conversation. We made note that he
is still in pretty bad shape, still barely stumble walking and mostly just
lying there. But we finally we are
sorting through issues. Our concerns in order of priority are the fact he is
not eating or drinking on his own; his personality changes (so fearful
yesterday and sometimes snappish); mobility/cognition abilities; and his lungy
breathing that seems to produce rock solid pellets of mucus.
Dr. Julia’s further research indicated horse nettles cause
huge gatrointestinal problems that take a while to be expelled and the tissue
healed. Ingested the
nettles that cover the stalks and leaves of the plant dig into the gut lining
and cause infections, hundreds of them, that fester from the poison until the
body manages to dissolve them. (And Ferguson seems to have been munching on
them semi-regularly for awhile before he made himself sick; so imagine the
damage.) No wonder Ferguson stopped eating. I fear his lungs are fighting the same battle from snoofling to chose the perfect weed.
There is no antidote for horse nettles except time...and we
believe the continual IV flushing of his system is offering some help. He is on
both carprofen and tramadol for pain management right now and to help him
reestablish sleeping through the night (instead of his constant pacing which we
also believe is attributable to pain in conjunction with the epilepsy).
Dr. Julia believes that Ferguson has epilepsy that has been
awakened by horse nettle's toxicity. He has probably been an epi-dog for some
time and probably had only few seizure episodes. But he is a rescue dog and who
really knows his history before his saving and rebirth as a member of the WDA.
We are cautiously watching but right now we agree that
putting him on seizure meds will complicate his neuro and gastro systems; we
are going to avoid any of the options there unless an emergency need
arises. We want to effect a return to
normal mobility and awareness first. So Ferguson will continue going in each
day for IV intervention for tomorrow and Thursday and then we will take
precautions to be prepared for the weekend.
A
start, at last! I feel we at least have a tiny island of solid ground to stand
on as we work to bring Ferguson back. At last the
WDA feels we have something to hang our hope on and cheer about but as Benson
noted, not unkindly, our boy still looks
and acts like there is a long road to recovery.
3 comments:
We are sure glad to see an update and we hope dear Ferguson will be on the mend soon. Hugs from all of us!
Thank you so much for the update, Sue. As I said on Facebook, we are glad you at least have some idea now about what's ailing dear Ferguson. We're sending love and healing purrs and prayers your way. Hugs!
Oh Ferguson and the entire WDA - we are sending lots of love and healing purrs
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