See this? This is Molly not wanting a bacon dog treat. She's sitting on the futon in the playroom, which she usually only does once every couple days in the late evening when she is tired but we aren't going to bed yet. I put a blanket on her an hour prior to this picture, and she clearly hadn't moved. I also tried offering her chicken broth, cheese, and bread. Nothing interested her.
I noticed last Thursday or Friday that Molly wasn't hungry (which is weird). I figured it was just a bug and forgot about it. It seemed a little better on Saturday, she hung out with me outside while I worked in the yard. But she still has the food in her bowl from the middle of last week (and she didn't want my steak bone last night), so clearly something isn't right.
For some reason I suddenly got really worried about it this morning. After trying all these different foods that she would normally jump about all spazzily for, I finally called a vet. The lady on the phone asked several questions, but no, I don't think Molly has gotten into anything lately.
"Is there any chance she's had salmon or trout?"
Yes. We almost never have fish. I haven't bought any since Utah. But our neighbor brought over some fresh trout that he caught on April 27th. I didn't make it that night because Dan isn't home for dinner on Tuesdays (Portland Mormon Choir practice), so I made it the next day. And I threw Molly little pieces as I cut it up. I always do that with whatever seems like okay for her to eat. Apparently trout is NOT in the okay-to-eat category!
Google "trout poisoning in dogs," and a whole bunch of stuff comes up. They all basically say this (copied from here):
SPD (Salmon Poisoning Disease) is an acute, infectious disease that affects dogs, wolves, ferrets and foxes, when they ingest uncooked salmon, trout, steelhead, and similar freshwater fish. While the disease is typically more prevalent in the Pacific Northwest (Washington, Oregon and northern California), the disease has surfaced from a dog ingesting raw fish in Southern Calfornia.
Symptoms of SPD include vomiting, loss of appetite, fever, diarrhea, weakness, swollen lymph nodes, and dehydration.
“Most people in this area are unfamiliar with the symptoms of this disease, which appear within five to seven days after eating infected raw fish. Left undiagnosed, SPD can be fatal within several weeks,” explained Mike Moore, DVM, at VCA All-Care Animal Referral Center.
“SPD is treatable if diagnosed quickly. If your dog has been around raw fish or you are unsure of what they have ingested and symptoms appear, consider SPD a possibility and see your veterinarian immediately for evaluation and treatment,” he added.
Symptoms of SPD include vomiting, loss of appetite, fever, diarrhea, weakness, swollen lymph nodes, and dehydration.
“Most people in this area are unfamiliar with the symptoms of this disease, which appear within five to seven days after eating infected raw fish. Left undiagnosed, SPD can be fatal within several weeks,” explained Mike Moore, DVM, at VCA All-Care Animal Referral Center.
“SPD is treatable if diagnosed quickly. If your dog has been around raw fish or you are unsure of what they have ingested and symptoms appear, consider SPD a possibility and see your veterinarian immediately for evaluation and treatment,” he added.
I'm 99% sure this is what happened! My poor, poor puppy dog! I poisoned her with raw fish! I'm sorry Molly!
We have a vet appointment at 3. Hopefully it's still easily taken care of!!!
2 comments:
That's awful. I hope it is still something they can still fix. Keep us posted. :(
poor molly! I have never heard of that. good to know! I'll be careful with all the fish Garrett thinks he can catch this summer.
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