My 6 Week Old Chocolate Lab Has Parvo Please Help...

W1NN1NG

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Jun 1, 2011
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Last night I gave my wife our first puppy for our 5th wedding anniversary, and all through the night he was vomiting and had bad diarrhea. I took him to the vet this morning and he tested strong positive for Parvo. I paid a $500 deposit but still owe $800. This is for treatment until Sunday. If he needs more treatment it will cost more.

If there is anything you can do financially (call the vet office to verify), prayerfully, or just any advice or help it would be greatly appreciated. This is my first dog ever and i'm heartbroken. Some might say this is just a dog, but to me it means so much more.

Thanks, i'll keep you updated on his progress.

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Yesterday?

Can't you get the breeder to exchange it for one without Parvo?

You've been scammed.

/thread.

The breeder should be responsible for the vet bills.


EDIT:

OP if you have a contract with the breeder review it. There might be something in there about this. I know when I bought my son his dog I got a good contract and if this would have happened they would have paid for it.
 
Don't mean to sound like a dick as I do feel sorry for the animal but instead of supporting some shitty fucktard breeder you should have thought about adopting. Can't say I feel sorry for you, but I do for the animal and I hope someone helps you out for the dog's sake.
 
If I had anything to give to help you I would. I know how you feel.

I shelled out over $3,000 for emergency surgery shortly after I adopted a kitten who had been abused and left in a box in the snow outside the vet's office. It took forever to pay off, but saving her life was worth it.

Regardless of the outcome, I hope you go after the breeder in some way so that he'll stop his puppy factory operation. If ever there was a case to run a negative SEO campaign...

We should unleash Ice2Eskimos. :)
 
Treatment usually involves extensive hospitalization, due to the severe dehydration and damage to the intestines and bone marrow. A CPV test should be given as early as possible if CPV is suspected in order to begin early treatment and increase survival rate if the disease is found.

Treatment ideally also consists of crystalloid IV fluids and/or colloids, antinausea injections (antiemetics) such as metoclopramide, dolasetron, ondansetron and prochlorperazine, and antibiotic injections such as cefoxitin, metronidazole, timentin, or enrofloxacin. IV fluids are administered and antinausea and antibiotic injections are given subcutaneously, intramuscularly, or intravenously. The fluids are typically a mix of a sterile, balanced electrolyte solution, with an appropriate amount of B-complex vitamins, dextrose and potassium chloride. Analgesic medications such as buprenorphine are also used to counteract the intestinal discomfort caused by frequent bouts of diarrhea.

In addition to fluids given to achieve adequate rehydration, each time the puppy vomits or has diarrhea in a significant quantity, an equal amount of fluid is administered intravenously. The fluid requirements of a patient are determined by the animal's body weight, weight changes over time, degree of dehydration at presentation and surface area.

A blood plasma transfusion from a donor dog that has already survived CPV is sometimes used to provide passive immunity to the sick dog. Some veterinarians keep these dogs on site, or have frozen serum available. There have been no controlled studies regarding this treatment.Additionally, fresh frozen plasma and human albumin transfusions can help replace the extreme protein losses seen in severe cases and help assure adequate tissue healing.

Once the dog can keep fluids down, the IV fluids are gradually discontinued, and very bland food slowly introduced. Oral antibiotics are administered for a number of days depending on the white blood cell count and the patient's ability to fight off secondary infection. A puppy with minimal symptoms can recover in 2 or 3 days if the IV fluids are begun as soon as symptoms are noticed and the CPV test confirms the diagnosis. If more severe, depending on treatment, puppies can remain ill from 5 days up to 2 weeks. However, even with hospitalization, there is no guarantee that the dog will be cured and survive.
Personally, I think euthanisation is the kindest thing, sorry.
 
Gah, what a cute dog. It's too sad that this had to happen to him, especially when he's a baby. The vet bills on dogs are pretty bad, I know that myself since I had to take my dog in for bad teeth. With your lab, if you get him the right treatment he has a 80-85% of living.

Hey, throw up your Paypal email address. Maybe some of us will help you pay of your vet bills. You'll have $250 coming from me.

This is my best friend:
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You may want to look into getting pet insurance, too. It wont cover everything by any means but it may cover some of the medication/injections. Depending on the plan. I adopted a stray cat who had fleas, ticks, giadia, worms. Pet insurance probably saved us a good 700 dollars.
 
Regardless of the outcome, I hope you go after the breeder in some way so that he'll stop his puppy factory operation. If ever there was a case to run a negative SEO campaign...
There'll always be dog breeders as long as people don't adopt their dogs. It's not the breeder's fault people buy from breeders, it's supply and demand.
 
Call the admin office of valley animal center at : 559-233-8690 , and share this info with 'em. They can raise enough money to get this animal all the medical attention it needs, and pray to Christ, all will be well.

No matter what, you should feel good about the fact that you care about your dog more than the breeder and still trying to make sure it survives.
 
You may want to look into getting pet insurance, too. It wont cover everything by any means but it may cover some of the medication/injections. Depending on the plan. I adopted a stray cat who had fleas, ticks, giadia, worms. Pet insurance probably saved us a good 700 dollars.

Am not sure on how insurance will work once the diagnosis has been done and the treatment begun.

OP - I know how you feel. The 20th of this month will mark the first anniversary of me burying Blackie (A pitch black stray that ventured into our yard when he was barely a few weeks old and decided to make it it's home.)

PM me your Paypal - I'll see what I can do.
 
Breeder already gave me a refund but I want to save him, she was going to euthanize him.
Ah crap. In that case you have to decide which outcome for the little guy is the most humane.

Is his suffering so great that a euthanization will be the better option? Only you and google know the answer to that.

If you think not, I'd suggest taking MacG up on his offer above.
 
There'll always be dog breeders as long as people don't adopt their dogs. It's not the breeder's fault people buy from breeders, it's supply and demand.

Right, but this guy in particular did something that resulted in this puppy getting Parvo. Who knows how many other dogs he's bred and sold that have the same condition?
 
Am not sure on how insurance will work once the diagnosis has been done and the treatment begun.
Yeah, you may be right. They let us buy our insurance after we already knew how much it was going to cost/what he was diagnosed with. But the stuff my cat had was somewhat run of the mill. It may help if the Parvo treatment will require on going prescription medication. But yeah, getting insurance wont help with what he's already been billed.
 
Idiots (including my girlfriend) always get these awesome pets w/out realizing that soon they'll be mourning it. I love our Labrador but would have never fucking got it in the first place cause I hate when things I care about die. And a healthy dog has 10-15 yrs of life at most. So the question is how much money do you expect from others to support your thoughtless decision? Animals all around the world (and people for that matter) die every fucking second.. should we try to save them all? Best not to get attached to short-lived things if you actually have a heart in the first place. It's a hard lesson but it's a hard shitty world.
Sorry if I sound like an asshole I'm probably mostly just pissed that my own lab will be dead in 6 yrs or so most likely. But I guess most people just don't think about death until it's on their doorstep.
 
>So the question is how much money do you expect from others to support your thoughtless decision?

He's not asking for money. Kind people here are offering it.
 
Sorry to hear that dude. It really sucks losing a dog, I hope the best for that dog. Will he be better after the treatment or he will need continuous treatment?
 
My heart goes out to you and your puppy man. While all the peeps harshing on breeders might have a logical argument it does jackshit to help you in an emotional time like this.

When I was in my early 20's I had my first dog and she got Parvo at about 12 weeks. A few days in the vet and a couple weeks of soft bland foods and medicine at home and she was all good... lasted 13 awesome years.

I dunno if being only 6 weeks makes a difference but sounds like you brought your dog in quickly so I would hope he'll be fine with treatment.

You might want to tell the vet things are tight financially and see if they will let you do a few payments on the outstanding balance, giving you enough time to do some stuff to be able to afford the bills.

Or... maybe do something like this: WordPress Fundraising Plugin - WPMU Dev I'd donate.

Good luck.
 
How did he get Parvo? I had a dog get parvo and it was from the vaccination itself. They use a live virus to build up the immunity... I really don't remember all the specifics beyond that because I was about 10 when this happened. The manufacturer ended up paying for the entire bill and the dog was in there for over a month.

Fortunately, male dogs have a much better chance of survival... females don't usually make it. My dog was a female and barely survived. She never really grew afterwards and was about 6 months when she got it. She never had any major medical issues after that until she was old and lived to be about 10 or 11.