Tequila had one adrenal gland removed in December 1994. I got her in August
of 1995. Now she is entirely bald and I feel so bad. She still eats well
and plays, but I notice that she also sleeps a lot more and the play
sessions are much shorter than they used to be.
My vet, whom I like and trust, has seen her for several years now. So he
sees the hair loss as totally drastic, while I see her daily and am not as
shocked by it. He offered to remove the second adrenal gland (partial) for
about $350. I opted not to have the surgery, but to put her on lysodren.
I'm almost sure that everything I've seen & read indicates that removal of
the second adrenal gland gives them only about 3 months left of life. If
that's true, she'd be gone by now if I had had the surgery. I'm probably
wrong about this, but it seems to stick in my head. It's like I see it as a
death sentence.
On top of that, my SO is totally against purposefully inflicting pain and/or
stress on the critters. He doesn't want the vets or us poking and proding
on our critters when they are obviously not suffering (aside from the
obvious, vaccinations, exams, etc.). I completely understand what he's
saying, but as a nursing student myself, I also look at it from a different
perspective. What about diabetes in humans? Are we just supposed to ignore
the fact that there is a (treatable) disease occuring within the body
because the insulin shots might cause a bit of momentary pain? But if
you're not convinced that the treatment will help...in fact, might hinder.
$350 is a lot of money. Not that Tequila is not worth it, if I knew it
would help her and prolong her life I'd do it in a snap. Tequila is 5 1/2
now. From all indications she has had a good life. At this time my SO and
I have decided to let her be. If we become enlighted that we need to treat
this matter differently, we will. In the meantime we are keeping a keen eye
for any changes in her. If anyone has some USEFUL imput, I'd really
appreciate it.
I'm a bit worried because we leave for vacation Saturday for 2 1/2 weeks.
The girl who is housesitting for us has no experience with ferrets, but
she's good and I really trust her. She's looking forward to taking care of
the ferrets, and I didn't want to remove them from their home for that
period of time. My vet knows that we'll be gone and will treat as he sees
fit, if something happens. I have a cat that has underlying conditions too.
Good thing my "kids" bring so much joy into my life!
Holly (the zookeeper)
[Posted in FML issue 1633]
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