Odessa
New member
- Apr 9, 2013
- 25
- 1
- Country
- Canada
- Bulldog(s) Names
- Tucker & in extended family his dad Diesel & cousin Odessa
Tucker is an 18mo happy male whom had always been healthy and raised on a strict diet of the most premium kibble I could find. Tucker had sudden onset of frequent peeing, blood in urine and what we and the vet thought was a bladder infection proved to be much more serious. I noticed the change in Tucker on a Wednesday evening, Thursday I made a vet appointment for the following day. Friday the vet did a full exam and urinalysis, by this time his peeing had become a strain that he would now dribble rather then pee in a stream and would take 3x as long for a pee session. Saturday the urinalysis came back negative for any infection but showed cystine crystals and the vet recommended a x-ray and ultrasound.
I took Tucker into a second vet on Saturday for a second opinion, Tuckers straining had progressed over the 24 hours to the point he was now needing to drip pee every hour. The second vet looked at Tuckers urinalysis and predicted that he might have stones and agreed the next step would be an ultrasound, the only problem is no one does ultrasounds in the 200km radius on a weekend! Tucker was at risk for a complete blockage which would then be life threatening, I was stunned that being in a big city no one could do the ultrasound he needed until Monday! The vet offered to try a catheter to relieve some of the back up in the bladder, he tried and unfortunately he couldn't get it to pass which he said likely confirms Tucker had stones in his urethra.
So we went home Saturday hoping Tuckers condition wouldn't worsen at the same speed it had in the past 2 days, we waited through Sunday and Monday morning I was on the phone with the specialist office trying to confirm an appointment time from Tuckers referral. They promised someone would get back to me, they didn't until 3pm only to tell me no tech was in that day and the soonest Tucker would be seen was Tuesday at 2pm or I could book for the following appoint on Thursday. I couldn't believe he couldn't get in, this was an absolute emergency! Tucker now was peeing 3 drips or urine with 2 mins of straining. I was told he would make it as long as he didn't stop completely...
By 5 pm Tucker was completely blocked and I had to rush him to a specialty emergency department. At emergency they sedated him, ran iv and tried to run another catheter with no success. They ran x-rays which showed no stones which further backed the prediction of Cystine stones, the dr did a non diagnostic ultrasound and he saw stones in Tuckers urethra. The ER Dr blasted the stones back into Tuckers bladder in order to drain his bladder, but said he needed surgery first thing tomorrow and not to wait for the diagnostic ultrasound or he will be in the same situation. He said it would be up to the vet if they were comfortable doing the surgery without the diagnostic ultrasound. Six hours in emergency we took Tucker home still half sedated and not sure if our puppy would even make it through.
Tuesday morning I pleaded my vet to do the surgery and they graciously agreed. They pulled more then 50 stones out of my boy, I still can't believe he had so many. Tucker has spent the week recovering, it is one week today and he is heeling great but still having troubles peeing due to the swelling. He will be seen again in a couple days and then bi-weekly for the first 6 months, then monthly there after until he has 6 months clear of urinalysis. Cystinuria is life long and this is likely to reoccur, it is a matter of when and to what degree. With the severity and his young age his outlook isn't good and it is very painful to think I may have only bought Tucker some more time with us and he will go through this again. This was a very painful and difficult thing for him to go through, it has cost $2000 so far and I was already struggling in debt.
Cystinuria is a defect which prevents the kidney tubes from naturally absorbing cystine crystals, they build up and create stones. I have read it is highly rare, only 1% of all stones are cystine and it is not controllable by diet. My vet said the only prevention is to lower the amount of cystine crystals by feeding a very low protein diet because protein turns to amino-acids which create cystine crystals but of course protein deficiency also creates it's own set of problems. The Dr recommends Hills urinary, I have my reservations on this and will need to research all options, if anyone has any recommendations I would really love to hear them.
That said, it has been one roller coaster week, we are so grateful to have Tucker with us today to cuddle and laugh at his goofy ways. Anyone else had this battle too?
I took Tucker into a second vet on Saturday for a second opinion, Tuckers straining had progressed over the 24 hours to the point he was now needing to drip pee every hour. The second vet looked at Tuckers urinalysis and predicted that he might have stones and agreed the next step would be an ultrasound, the only problem is no one does ultrasounds in the 200km radius on a weekend! Tucker was at risk for a complete blockage which would then be life threatening, I was stunned that being in a big city no one could do the ultrasound he needed until Monday! The vet offered to try a catheter to relieve some of the back up in the bladder, he tried and unfortunately he couldn't get it to pass which he said likely confirms Tucker had stones in his urethra.
So we went home Saturday hoping Tuckers condition wouldn't worsen at the same speed it had in the past 2 days, we waited through Sunday and Monday morning I was on the phone with the specialist office trying to confirm an appointment time from Tuckers referral. They promised someone would get back to me, they didn't until 3pm only to tell me no tech was in that day and the soonest Tucker would be seen was Tuesday at 2pm or I could book for the following appoint on Thursday. I couldn't believe he couldn't get in, this was an absolute emergency! Tucker now was peeing 3 drips or urine with 2 mins of straining. I was told he would make it as long as he didn't stop completely...
By 5 pm Tucker was completely blocked and I had to rush him to a specialty emergency department. At emergency they sedated him, ran iv and tried to run another catheter with no success. They ran x-rays which showed no stones which further backed the prediction of Cystine stones, the dr did a non diagnostic ultrasound and he saw stones in Tuckers urethra. The ER Dr blasted the stones back into Tuckers bladder in order to drain his bladder, but said he needed surgery first thing tomorrow and not to wait for the diagnostic ultrasound or he will be in the same situation. He said it would be up to the vet if they were comfortable doing the surgery without the diagnostic ultrasound. Six hours in emergency we took Tucker home still half sedated and not sure if our puppy would even make it through.
Tuesday morning I pleaded my vet to do the surgery and they graciously agreed. They pulled more then 50 stones out of my boy, I still can't believe he had so many. Tucker has spent the week recovering, it is one week today and he is heeling great but still having troubles peeing due to the swelling. He will be seen again in a couple days and then bi-weekly for the first 6 months, then monthly there after until he has 6 months clear of urinalysis. Cystinuria is life long and this is likely to reoccur, it is a matter of when and to what degree. With the severity and his young age his outlook isn't good and it is very painful to think I may have only bought Tucker some more time with us and he will go through this again. This was a very painful and difficult thing for him to go through, it has cost $2000 so far and I was already struggling in debt.
Cystinuria is a defect which prevents the kidney tubes from naturally absorbing cystine crystals, they build up and create stones. I have read it is highly rare, only 1% of all stones are cystine and it is not controllable by diet. My vet said the only prevention is to lower the amount of cystine crystals by feeding a very low protein diet because protein turns to amino-acids which create cystine crystals but of course protein deficiency also creates it's own set of problems. The Dr recommends Hills urinary, I have my reservations on this and will need to research all options, if anyone has any recommendations I would really love to hear them.
That said, it has been one roller coaster week, we are so grateful to have Tucker with us today to cuddle and laugh at his goofy ways. Anyone else had this battle too?