Chin Soon Has Insulinoma & A Nightmare Vet Visit
I'm back after a long absence... This post is long but I want to get all the facts out so please bear with me.
Chin Soon is 5½ now and until recently she has had no health problems at all other than minor vaccination reactions. Lately she's had two symptoms: hind end weakness and hair loss, almost entirely on her tail. Chin Soon has rat tail at every coat change and she always grows the hair back quickly. This winter she didn't. My fears were insulinoma and adrenal disease. I've had a couple of ferrets in the past have both at once. I also thought of lymphoma. Anyway, off to the vet...
I've been back in North Carolina for a while now but I was in a quandry about what vet to take Chin Soon too. Our original vet here, Dr. Dan Hudson, retired a few years ago. The vet we used after that rarely sees ferrets now. The other vet I really trust moved all the way across the state a few years back. There are two ferret vets left in my local area. One has a fantastic reputation in terms of care but also has a reputation for being outrageously expensive and for doing everything and anything extra to increase the bill. Another who shall remain nameless was recommended by one of the active members of the local ferret club for both quality care and reasonable prices. In the current economy I decided I really had to go to the second vet.
The new vet checked Chin Soon's fasting blood glucose which was 41 so that confirmed insulinoma. She wants to do an ultrasound to see if an adrenal tumor shows up. All well and good so far. She said some other things vis a vis adrenal treatment that made no sense to me but I filed them for later research. She called in a perscription for Pediapred which I picked up yesterday afternoon. This is where things started to go seriously wrong.
The dosage with the perscription was 1.0ml twice daily, 5mg/ml solution. Yes, 1.0 not 0.1. Every other vet I've dealt with started my ferrets at 0.1ml, rechecked the glucose, and adjusted the dosage. A dosage 10 times higher worried me greatly. I called the vet's office to confirm that this was an error and that someone slipped a digit. No, it turns out that because Chin Soon's blood glucose level was "so low" she really wanted to give her 2mg per day. I wasn't going to give that much without a second opinion
.
This morning I called that vet that had moved across the state who I really do trust. She told me that the dosage prescribed was higher than what they give with chemotherapy to destroy a ferret's immune system! While she wouldn't prescribe a dosage without a visit (and I don't blame her for
that) she read me the textbook maximum dosage and it is less than a third of what the new vet prescribed for Chin Soon.
My decision, of course, is to drive three and a half hours and to take Chin Soon to the vet I spoke to today. The new vet's dosage would actually have been dangerous if not eventually life threatening for poor little Chin Soon. Thankfully I knew enough about ferrets after 11 years of having them and going through all their medical issues with them to question that dosage. Imagine if I didn't. Imagine if I just did what the new vet said. Most people would have done just that. I would have 10 years ago.
This incident, this nightmare vet, reinforced my belief that ferret medicine is a specialty and that ferrets have to go to vets who have both experience and a high success rate with ferrets. Thankfully there is an active ferret community online and in most major cities which allows ferret owners to network and get the information I need.
I also realize just how spoiled the ferrets and I were when we were in Green Bay and had a great ferret vet 20 minutes away.
Labels: chin soon, ferret vets, Insulinoma, veterinarians
1 Comments:
I am glad you got competent help for your ferret. The lesson you learned doesn't just apply to ferrets; it's not merely ferrets that are at risk of being harmed by incompetent vets. Unfortunately, incompetent vets are legion in number and their profession tolerates them. Granted, when you have something other than a dog or cat, you are at even higher risk of harm due to veterinary ignorance, because so many vets advertise themselves as "exotic vets" who are not. Please see The Bad Vet Daily for real life accounts as well as my website, The Toonces Project.
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