Karen, I know exactly what you are going through. My now three yr. old female ferret started losing hair on her tail in Jan.95 and then it started progressing to her body. On 2-7 she had surgery and the ovarian "bud" was found, her adrenals "looked" normal. Also at that time she had a swollen vulva. When things did not approve after several weeks I attempted to breed her with an unaltered male. More hair loss, itchy dry skin, loss of weight and still swollen vulva, so I got a second opinion and another surgeon and on 4-25 Weezul had a second surgery and the surgeon found uterine tissue and the adrenals were the same size. After no improvement I had my vet give Weezul HCG shots, thinking all the while it was ovarian related. After no improvement I asked the FML for advice and received several helpful responses. Dr. Williams and Pam Grant both advised that just because the adrenals are the same size does not mean they are normal. They were right! On 6-1 Weezul went in for her 3rd surgery and the right adrenal was now slightly larger then the left, and after the path was done by Dr. Williams it was found to be cancerous! Karen, there is a blood test for adrenal disease offered by the University of Tennessee. Send for the Adrenal Disease Package offered by Pamela Greene. It has all the information about this test. Get a vet familiar with adrenal surgery if you see no results soon and think about having him/her look at the adrenals on this poor little ferret. Good luck, Judith Gallipeau. [Posted in FML issue 1223]