Sorry its been so long (2 weeks) since my last post, work has been crazy and so has home!
We’re now 48 days post-amp if I did the math right. 8/2 follow up with surgeon went well, amputation site looks like its totally healed up and the hair has already grown over enough to hide the scar. Lab work shows her kidneys and liver are handling the itraconazole well, all other abs were also normal. Unfortunately, what looked like a bit of arthritis pre-amp appears to be fungal in origin. So we’ve got a neurology consult tomorrow morning to determine a further course of action. Sheba has already out lived all the dogs in the literature we’ve scoured and she’s got a lot of fight, but there’s no precedent for surviving disseminated fungal infections past 6 months to a year. And if the Penicillium spp. diagnosis sticks we could have far less time. Yes, we’re still waiting for a complete ID!
In the meantime, we’re back on gabapentin to control the spinal pain, and she refuses to eat. We’ve stocked up on can food, dehydrated raw food, and Honest Kitchen’s Popper Toppers. Dang brat won’t even touch the ground meats we’ve prepared: bison, venison, rabbit, chicken…at least Buster has been able to enjoy the exotic meats! Feeding her just about every hours, or at least trying. We may resort to baby food soon. She must be eating just enough because she’s only lost pound in 2 weeks. More to come after tomorrow’s appointment!







We were supposed to have a consult with a new internist, apparently her staff forgot to tell her that so she was very unprepared. Didn’t even have Sheba’s records from across the office. She showed us how to check her lymph nodes, symptoms to look for and agreed to add terbinafine, and antifungal that is commonly used in conjunction with azole antifungals when there is systemic disease. She’s supposed to give me a call with the microbe ID and susceptibility results (shouldn’t be back yet) when it does finally come in. At least its not infectious to the other dogs, but we’re looking at 2-3 years not that we know there’s lymph node involvement. That microbe ID will give a better clue as to the growth speed of the fungus and give us an idea of how long it’ll take to spread globally.