Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Hello, I am a new member of this group, as well as a new dog owner. I have a 5 month old labradoodle. She has had off and on diarrhea since about the second month I've owned her. First, full disclosure, I did not know a lot and I didn't go to a breeder, I just saw her picture on line and fell in love. She came from an amish family in Ohio. After the fact I realized I was supposed to know more about a breeder. :(
Anyway, I would take her to a vet they would have me change her food and put her on an antibiotic. I did this three times then tried a holistic vet. She put her on a prescription canned food and is testing for allergies and the diarrhea seemed to be getting better for the last week or so, but last night she ended up awake in the night again and now she also has blood in her stool.
I think this is more than a food issue. I called the holistic vet who said she can see her Friday, but I'm really worried. Has this happened to anyone else? Thanks....
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Thank you to everyone who responded and offered you help and support. The expensive fecal test that they had to send out for took 3 days. It came back positive for Clostirdium Perfringens. The new holistic vet (who seems much better than the last one) is keeping her on an antibiotic for three full weeks to hopefully finally take care of it. He also changed her from that canned prescription crap to Honest Kitchen mixed with chicken and pumpkin. I also supplement her with goats milk and a probiotic. Her stool is finally looking normal. I am not crazy about the longer term antibiotic, but when I have a diagnosis I'm more willing to treat it, as opposed to trial and error.
Thank you all again for all of your support!!
Yes, this vet does sound better. Good luck with the treatment.
When our Springer Spaniel developed a serious skin problem (sores and hair loss), our local vet treated it with cortizone type shots and short term antibiotics. It turned out that he was allergic to the cortizone and short term antibiotics was never going to help. We went to the specialist who explained that Gordie needed to be on an antibiotic for at least 45 days with a re-check to see if he needed to continue it - he did for another15 days. When he had a second bout of the problem, we by-passed the regular vet and went directly to the specialist. That time he only needed a 30 day round of antibiotics. My point is that taking the antibiotics for a longer term may be exactly what is needed to really clear up the problem.
My first dog had the diarrhea issue so I went back to where I got her. I switched her to her original food and she was fine. I guess when you change your pets diet you must do it gradually by mixing 3/4 old to 1/4 new for a few days than add another 1/4 until you replace old food. Also I have put 1 to 2 tsp of cooked white rice to her food to stop diarrhea. Careful, too much rice will cause constipation.
Bright blood usually means irritation not perforation of bowel which is more serious problem.
Just a quick update..Pooch is still on the Metronidazole for one more week. She seems to be doing well. I'm nervous about when we take her off though. She has been on the probiotic as well. The new holistic vet gave me a prescription strength probiotic so I feel good about that.
I've been making her boiled chicken and adding it to honest kitchen base. I've also added pumpkin and goats milk because she doesn't like the base without those additions.
I'm wondering if anyone has suggestions on treats? I've been giving her dehydrated chicken as a treat but it gets very expensive. She goes to a training academy during the day because I work and I don't want her crated all day. The training place uses positive reinforcement and "work for food" methods which I like. But, her food is not like a kibble that can be handed to her as a treat. The vet said that giving her just the chicken during the day without the base would not be balanced. The whole program works great for dogs who eat kibble because they get their kibble as treats throughout the training day.
I apologize for the long post, I'm just trying to explain why I seem so obsessed with dog treats. :) I want to find something that won't impact the progress I'm making on her tummy but will still have her be able to be rewarded like the other dogs at her training..
Thanks..
You really can't give her anything other than plain chicken for treats right now. And yes, it's expensive; meat costs more than cereal. Take a look at Pure Bites, that's the least expensive pure chicken treat i have found that's made by a reliable company.
I'm having a hard time understanding what your vet means about just giving her chicken treats would "not be balanced". As long as her meals are complete and balanced, her treats don't have to be. In a dog's lifetime, we give them all kinds of single foods for treats: a dehydrated sweet potato, a blueberry or two, a piece of dehydrated chicken...you get the idea. It's the same with humans. You can eat some fruit for a snack without having to eat a complete and balanced meal every time you eat anything. Treats are treats, just like snacks are snacks, and a meal is a meal. Treats and snacks don't need to be "balanced".
However, if all meals are being given as training rewards a bit at a time, I can understand your vet's point.
I don't at all like idea of a puppy (or even an adult dog) getting all of their meals as training rewards; it's a horrible way for a puppy to be fed (throughout the day, dribs and drabs at a time) even if they are eating kibble, and in all honesty, it sounds horribly cruel to me. Training treats and food rewards are one thing, and "work for every bite you get all day" is something else. Sitting and waiting before being fed is how a puppy "works" for her food. I'd find a different day care and a different training program. If this has been going on for a while, it could actually have contributed to the digestive problems to begin with.
Also, what exactly is the "prescription strength" probiotic? My guy is on an extremely powerful human probiotic that contains 225 billion CFUs per dose and is only sold thru pharmacies, and even that doesn't require a prescription. There are a couple of probiotics like Purina's Fortiflora and Iams's Prostora that are sold only thru vets, and they are not very good at all. I'm asking because you're going to need a really good one after the metronidazole is finished. Be sure that you are giving the probiotics at least two hours apart from the antibiotics, and longer is better.
The in-house fecal float test is more accurate for detecting giardia than the ELISA test, and giardia doesn't always show up in every stool sample. Since a LOT of doodle puppies come home from the breeder with giardia, I wouldn't be sure Henry doesn't have it. However, even if he does, you still don't want metronidazole, you want Panacur. It is more effective and doesn;t have the side effects that metronidazole has. I would ask my vet for Panacur. The probiotics should help a lot, and you can give him some plain yogurt in the meantime.
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