Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 21

Thread: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

  1. #1

    Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    One of our dogs has recently been to see our vet so this is just to see if anyone has a 2nd idea.

    We've all seen a dog do the "body shake" when they're wet. They'll shake their whole body AND perhaps at the end, keep their head shaking a bit, almost violently yet it's with specific intention.

    Otis seems to have this head (only) shaking syndrome. Mind you all his shots are up to date, I took him to see our vet perhaps 8 weeks ago about this VERY issue and he could find nothing. He gave Otis a box of prednazone to take over a week... (I hate doing that proceedure, such a pain)

    Anyways, the pills ran out, his head shaking continues. Last week, went back to same vet for his annual checkup/shots and all seems fine. Dr. even asked again about his head shaking and checked his ears again.

    Here are the "symptoms"

    Otis will be standing/sitting/laying down and just shake his head as though it were soaking wet (violently, yet with intent as mentioned above). He won't shake his body, just his head. He DOES NOT scratch at his head. We thought he might have fleas/mites/other in his ears which I guess is still possible but I'd expect our Vet to have noticed that.

    During the night, poor Otis will be up almost all night with this intermittent and determined head shaking. Sometimes, he'll do it every 60/90 seconds for 10 minutes...then perhaps do nothing for 30 minutes.

    Since he has floppy ears, they make the flop sound as he does it which helps to wake ME up during the night.

    So, not only am I laying in bed feeling bad at his apparent discomfort (and again, he's NOT scratching at his ears/head at all) but I'm also feeling my OWN discomfort for not being able to keep a good sleep going.

    I have a little video of this but as I found out, it's something like 13 mb's in size [img]/forums/images/icons/shocked.gif[/img] . I didn't know my little digital camera would even HOLD something like that.

    So, He's been to the Vet 2 times in last say, 10 weeks, everything "seems" find/dandy, yet he continues his tortured head shake at all times of the day. Given I'm not at home during the day, I'd venture to say it's worse at night. No evident signs of fleas/other in his head.

    Is that symptomatic of anything that my vet might be missing? Should I ask doc to take a head scan?

    Thanks for any thoughts


  2. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Nova Scotia,Canada
    Posts
    3,108

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?


    Can you get an opinion from another vet?

    Egon.

  3. #3

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    Oh, I am intending that. It's a bit more difficult for me to do since I live so far out of town. I usually have to do it on the weekends.

    I was just putting this up here in case anyone cared to opine on their thoughts.

    When Otis contracted Blasto Mycosis, it was my wifes dogged determination knowing "something" was wrong that kept us taking the dog back & back to the vet.

    Seems she (wife) caught it so early, the symptoms were just barely noticable on the xrays (seems blasto has a charasteristic pattern on lung x-ray)

    Had the symptoms we noticed matured a bit more, the diagnosis would have probalby been a bit more quick. As it was, he sort of stumbled onto noticing "something" in the x-rays when we took Otis back the following time.

    If indeed something IS going on there (and it may not be), I'd rather catch it sooner than later, as such, if anyone has a thought as to "hmmm... that might be an early indication of..." then perhaps, I can bring that to the Vet's attention given that he might not think about that right off the bat (as per the Blasto situation).

    [img]/forums/images/icons/grin.gif[/img]

  4. #4
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Warrenton, MO
    Posts
    1,223

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    My first Black Lab did that. It was caused by ear mites and wax build up. There was a liquid that was dropped in the ear to kill the mites and soften/remove the wax. My wife treated that dog twice a day for a long time, then a preventive treatment every week or so. Drip in the liquid then hold and rub his ears.

    Of course your dogs issues may be caused by something completly unrelated.
    Gary
    ----------------------------------------------
    Hey! Aren't you supposed to be working?

  5. #5
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    NW PA
    Posts
    234

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    Do the dog's ears smell? That's always a sign of ear problems, but you can usually see the gunk, too. Either way I can't believe the vet missed anything if it was just an ear problem, unless something got lodged deep down inside, outside of his scopes view. He did look into the dog's ears with a scope, right?
    Might even be something in the dog's mouth. That may cause it to shake his head, it's just that you think ears when they have floppy ears.

    I'd make a drive to another vet.

  6. #6
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Denton, TX
    Posts
    196

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    I didn't see where you mentioned what breed (or predominant breed) Otis is? Is he a lab?

    Labs have a poorly designed ear that can let water get trapped when they swim. This then causes ear infections. The ears don't get a lot of gunk (like with mites), in fact, they can look spotless and clean. If you have a light skinned (skin, not fur) you might notice the insides of his ears are red and might feel warm. My yellow lab seldom scratched his ears, but he did shake his head frequently. This happens to us almost every spring when he starts swimming in the stock tanks on hot days. There's two types of drops you put in the ears. One is a cleaner (Epi-Otic) that helps dry up the water, the other is more of an oil based antibiotic (Tri-Top or Oto-max). It clears up after a few days of treatment.

    You can find them on petmeds.com

  7. #7
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    SouthCentral Oklahoma
    Posts
    5,236

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    Have you ever shot around this dog or has it ever experienced loud noises. Tinitus is a possibility. Of course tinitus doesn't require loud noises to cause it but an exposure at some time to a loud noise can make it more likely.

    Swim Ear is a product that my wife uses as she is prone to ear problems when she gets waer in her ears which has happened several times since she is open ocean SCUBA qualified. I also worked with a SURFER who surfed virtually every day and had to use drops i his ears afgter every wetting.

    The ear flapping noise doesn't help you or the dog. Consider a sort of ski mask to restrain the ears. Panty hose or similar can make a sort of hair net which covers the ears. This is sometimes done to keep long haired dogs from getting their ears filled with debris like weed seeds and such.

    None of the above are intended to in any way encourage you to delay getting a second professional vet exam from another vet. Wouldn't you hate it if the cause wasn't fixed and it drove the dog mad. Dogs can get "mental" from problems such as these and would require yoi to put it down or sedate it till its quality of life was severly reduced.

    Best of luck for a speedy resollution,

    [img]/forums/images/icons/smile.gif[/img] [img]/forums/images/icons/smile.gif[/img] Pat [img]/forums/images/icons/smile.gif[/img] [img]/forums/images/icons/smile.gif[/img]
    "I'm not from your planet, monkey boy!"

  8. #8
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    NW PA
    Posts
    234

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    </font><blockquote><font class="small">In reply to:</font><hr />
    Dogs can get "mental" from problems such as these and would require yoi to put it down or sedate it till its quality of life was severly reduced.

    [/ QUOTE ]

    Well, I have to agree. Putting it down would certainly severely reduce its quality of life.
    [img]/forums/images/icons/confused.gif[/img]

  9. #9

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    Otis is (we’re told) a retriever mix. Other than a bath every now &amp; then he rarely gets wet.

    Fred: I’ve not noticed any smells in ear (not tried either), hadn’t thought about mouth angle and don’t recall my vet checking in there other than a cursory review of teeth.

    Gsganzer, I’ll try to post pic of him but I could see him being considered light skinned

    Pat: Other than my Klipschorns, he’s not around much loud stuff.


    His ears WERE looked into by the vet using his little scope thing. They do appear to be pink but it looks more to me like a natural pink, rather than from being scratched.

    Hoping on getting to vet this Saturday unless I can take him into work with me!!!

  10. #10
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    NW PA
    Posts
    234

    Re: Any Veterinarians here for an 2nd opinion?

    Otis looks like a great dog, like a Golden mix maybe and I haven't met a bad one yet.
    Let us know what they find out. I'm very curious and want to file the answer in the memory banks.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •