Originally Posted by
Nut
Do you mean lbs? I said a dog can lose about one kilo over a day. Depending on strength of the drug and size of the dog. I have seen people weighing in a pound under from giving half a cc in the morning.
The fear of losing water is a legitimate one (especially water + electrolytes, etc.).
Even drinking a cup of coffee can cause you to piss several EXTRA times/day and get dehydrated, so shooting cortico-steroids (a pharmaceutical diuretic) should be taken seriously.
Pissing out an extra cup of water, a couple times/day, is very easy to envision ... and it adds-up quick.
1 cup = 8 oz = 240 ml = .25 k
2 cups = 16 oz = 480 ml = 1 lb of fluids
4 cups = 32 oz = 960 ml ~ 1 IV bag of fluids
This is absolutely why you need to be running fluids concurrently with any type of cortico-steroid therapy.
A bag of fluids = 1000 ml ~ 4 cups of fluid.
A dog might piss-out an extra few cups/day, so you must monitor what is happening with your animal, and it's all based on his size. Remember, all of this (the amount a dog pisses, the amount of drugs/fluids you give) is based on WEIGHT. If you monitor, and give the proper doses, it should be a seamless process, so there is no way ANY dog is going to "piss-out" more fluids than he's taking in,
IF he's getting the proper amount of IV fluids throughout the day ...
Your concerns are also why you take the dog OFF these drugs, ASAP, as soon as they eat/piss on their own
Originally Posted by
Nut
Think you can't highlight those text enough. It could be a fatal mistake to inject these dosages any other way than intravenous and then find out you can't hit a vein thus cannot give enough fluids. I think you made a typo on the minimum Dexamethasone dosage.
I think the highlighting helps, definitely. As a key, as you read
the article, realize that
Red = Warning
Green = Benefit
Still, a person needs to take the time to read the whole thing, digest, assimilate, and be willing to
re-read the article. They say it takes 5 readings just to be able to remember 65% of anything we read ... so this material is serious enough to read, and re-read ...
You were right about the typo, thanks for pointing it out.
Originally Posted by
Nut
Seems I was wrong about the high end dosages. But it's a good thread anyway and I think the article only got better.
They do seem like crazy doses, but again we're trying to
jump start the body, and save a life, so drastic doses are needed.
These drugs have short half-lifes, and are out of the body fairly quick, so it's an intense regimen to make a dog "snap out of it" (or, perhaps, back into it), to get him feeling good again, so that he goes back to normal. Once he's back to normal, there is no reason to continue these drugs.
And, I agree, if the end result is we ALL learn a little bit more, and refine our understanding, than that is the bottom line.
Originally Posted by
Nut
I have 3 questions regarding the subject.
1. When you use the high end dose of Dexamethasone; I suppose the dosage listed in the IV fluid therapy article will be increased?
No. That is what the original, bolus, dose is for in the
IV Article ...
Keep in mind that, even when the dog is losing extra fluids, it isn't all at once ... but over several hours ... and fluids are going into him just as fast, or faster.
Further, this action of fluids-in/fluids-out actually helps flush the dog of all the "broken pieces of himself" that occurred in the fight, so it's a good thing, quite frankly.
Originally Posted by
Nut
2. Lot of times organs shut down and can take a while for the kidney's to start back working. If you're going to lose allot of fluids due high end dosages of Dexamethasone can't this be a big problem?
The #1 cause of kidney failure is dehydration. However, if you're running the proper amount of fluids into the dog, he is NOT dehydrated any longer.
Further, associate factors of kidney failure are "clogging" of the kidneys with body waste, which is exacerbated by dehydration.
When your dog is done with a fight, he is flushing out the "broken pieces of himself" through his kidneys. Many times, the kidneys "shut down" and the dog will die, precisely because he's not passing this garbage or flushing anything.
The act of giving fluids, and the act of encouraging urination, actually accelerate the cleansing process to get that $#!^ out of the dog, and thus his body back to a clean, normal state.
This is also why you cease cortico-steroid use as soon as the dog is "up and eating" again, as well as pissing and shitting, because he is now capable of doing these things without drugs.
Originally Posted by
Nut
I have never used it, and for some reason the link isn't working for me.
Jack