Archive for the tag 'French Bulldog Veterinary'

Ask the Frenchie Vet - Pituitary Cushings Disease Treatment?

admin August 13th, 2008

My 11 yr old French Bulldog Otis was recently diagnosed with Pituitary cushings after showing symptoms for over a year. He has just started taking 10 mg of Trilostane twice a day.

He is showing severe muscle wasting in his hindlegs. His gait reflects this as does his reluctance to walk and jump. I take him to a holistic vet  who does acupuncture to help alleviate this but I am concerned.

Is there anything to help strengthen his legs?

Dr. Lori writes –
I suggest physical therapy.  This can include massage, hydrotherapy, and just plain walking at a nice regulated pace to help him build up his muscle mass.  You may also consider some natural antiinflammatories, such as fish oils and also some antioxidants.  Both can help reduce inflammation.

I am sorry to hear of Otis’ troubles and I wish you luck with keeping him comfortable.

Lori Hunt, DVM
French Bulldogs d’Assisi

Ask the French Bulldog Vet - Cleaning Bat Ears?

admin August 10th, 2008

Hello!
I am a brand new Mom of a little 10 weeks old Frenchie - Maya.
We have quite simple question to ask: How and how often should we clean famous bat ears?
Thanks a lot in advance!

Dr. Lori writes –

I would suggest weekly cleaning with a clean cloth and maybe some Q-tips in all the folds and crevices.  This should suffice so long as she doesn’t have an issue.  It will help prevent infections as well as alert you early if one is starting.  Enjoy your new baby!

Lori Hunt, DVM
French Bulldogs d’Assisi

Ask the French Bulldog Vet - Pup sleeps with open eyes?

admin August 9th, 2008

Our 7 mo. old Frenchie (male) sleeps quite often with his left eye half open.  He has plenty of tears, but I cannot imagine that this would be healthy over the long haul.  Should I take precautions?

Lori writes –

Some dogs often sleep with their eyes half open or all the way open.  This may be “normal” for him, but is worth having a full ophthalmologic exam, including tear production, so you can have peace of mind.

Lori Hunt, DVM
French Bulldogs d’Assisi

Ask the Frenchie Vet - Preventative Orthodontics on Puppy

lorihuntdvm July 23rd, 2008

have a 10 1/2 week old french bulldog.  He has a reverse scissor bite but I noticed that his top teeth are digging into the back side of his bottom gums.  Have you seen this before?  I have talked to two different vets.  One said to pull the teeth and that there was a 50% chance that the adult teeth would grow in normal (don’t really understand how pulling the teeth would affect the adult teeth). The other said that since there is no inflammation and that it doesn’t seem to be bothering him then we don’t need to pull them and just hope that the gums/jaw will adjust as he grows to accommodate the top teeth.

What do you think?  Have others had this issue and what have they done?

Dr. Lori writes -

Pulling baby teeth to make room for the adult teeth is known as preventative orthodontics, and can be a very good idea in some cases.  I would have to see him to tell you which way to go.  If he is not going to be shown, and instead will be neutered, I would wait and watch.  He is still quiet young and his bite will do a lot of changing in the next couple of months.

I would say if you still see the issue at 4 or 5 months, to consider pulling them so the adult teeth have a chance to come in in the appropriate positions and not do the same thing as the baby teeth.  You could do this at the same time as his neuter.

Dr. Lori Hunt, DVM

Editor’s note: We recently dealt with a similar issue here

Ask the French Bulldog Vet - Struvite Crystals in Frenchie Pup’s Urine

lorihuntdvm July 8th, 2008

I came across the “Ask the Frenchie Experts” while researching the following situation:

A weekend ago, our 13 week old Frenchie suddenly started having lots of small pee-ings (as opposed to going regularly or having a normal “accident”). So my wife thought he might have a bladder infection. She got a urine sample to the vet that day, who saw — I assume under a microscope because I wasn’t there — traces of blood in his urine. So the vet put the puppy on an oral antibiotic.

This last weekend, my wife took him back to the same vet, who saw the same results. So the vet sent the most recent urine sample to a lab, which returned a result of 7.5 pH and moderate crystals in the urine (as well as an elevated white cell count…). The vet wrote a prescription for Hill’s c/d, as well as to keep the puppy on antibiotics for another week.

Concerned about the growing nutritional needs of the puppy, and to get a second opinion, today I asked the puppy’s normal/local vet what to do. He looked at the faxed lab results, and suggested that we put the puppy back on normal canned food and bottled water, and to stop the antibiotics since it’s been 10 days already.

I would like to go with the second opinion because feeding a low calcium, non-puppy food like Hill’s c/d to a growing puppy seems like a bad idea. But having struvite stones form is equally bad (never mind the return of the uncontrolled small voidings).

The one thing I failed to mention is that the water at the weekend location has a lot of water softener in it because my wife’s father adds it. Thus I am hoping that could be the culprit here. (Although our 7 year old Frenchie living with him is fine)

Any advice in general would help, and maybe a tip on the most nutritious canned puppy food to get would be great.

Dr. Lori writes -

This is a puzzling situation, but I do agree with you that c/d is not an ideal diet for a growing puppy.  I am reading all these results, and while I see mention of blood and white blood cells, I don’t actually see any evidence of bacteria or cultures being done?

I would suggest starting there to see if there actually IS an infection.  If so, a culture would be in order.  I agree with your second opinion and at this point would stop all antibiotics and go to normal food for a while.  If the problem still exists in a few weeks, I would do a culture and sensitivity at that point, and take it from there.

Crystals can be somewhat normal in male dogs especially and probably have to do more with pH than anything.  I would encourage him to drink lots of water, even if it means “flavoring” it to get him to drink more, adding chicken broth to water will do wonders to attract their interest, or ice cubs can be a fun toy as well as help hydrate them.

Give an update when you can and good luck with your little boy

Lori Hunt, DVM

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