Well, I've seen this before, and it is a sad story. It happened 1 year ago today. She had just finished chasing a cat in the back yard (sorry cat lovers, but she enjoyed it...and never harmed the stray cats that got into our yard), and came into the house. Her back lags wobbled...and she collapsed. I raced her to an Emergency Vet Clinic...but by the time I got her there, she was fine. The vet could find nothing obviously wrong with her and sent her home with us with a recommendation to take it easy and to have her fully checked out a first opportunity.
On Tuesday (after Memorial day), she came up to me in my home office and nudged my arm...which told me she wanted to play Frisbee. We went out back and I got maybe five throws in when it happened again. I immediately raced her to another vet who specialized in Internal Medicine. They ran an EKG and there was a heart armithmia (sp?). So they did an Echo-Cardiogram. There was a cancerous tumor on her heart. The vet diagnosed it to be Harmongio Sarcoma and said that surgery and radiation were out of the question because of it's location. So we gave Chemo a try but with no result, and 2 weeks later the tumor had grown another 4 mm in size. The vet gave her 2-3 months to live saying there was nothing she could do for Belle.
I refused to accept this answer, and did some research. There are those who believe that the cure for cancer has been known since 1953. That cancer is not some misterious desease, but is a vitamin deficency desease like Skurvy or Polagra (sorry...my spelling is horrible). I figured, what the heck...got nothing to loose, so I ordered the vitamin (only place I could find it was on the web) and ordered the book on it, "A World Without Cancer" by G. Edward Griffin. You can buy it at Amazon.com:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/A...0851000/sr=1-3/ref=sc_b_3/104-5473209-9719901
Or from the author's web site:
http://www.realityzone.com/worwitcan.html
A month later, we had another echo-cardiogram (Belle's 3rd) and the tumor's growth had slowed...it was only 2mm larger after a full month. We got more agressive with the B-17 teatments.
Fast forward to April of this year...Belle was STILL alive and doing GREAT!!! Shortly after this...she started to feel below the weather so I took her to the vet who was absolutely AMAZED that she was still alive!!! He told me that it was virtually unheard of for a dog with Harmongio Sarcoma to live a year past diagnoses...and extremely rare for them to live past 6 months...and we were sitting at 11 months!! He figured she was suffering from alergies (I had forgotten about her hay fever) and so we took her home and treated her for alergies, but her appetite dropped off and she refused to eat. I initially thought she had a blockage in her digestive system because she had gotten into the trash. We finally decided that we'd better get an internal check-up to determine if she did have a blockage, but it turned out that it wasn't a blockage after all.
After the tests, it was determined that the tumor remained on her heart. It had not grown very much...but it still remained, and it had stressed Belle's heart to the point of failure.
Now, at this point, I think I should point out something that I read in the book mentioned above....although B-17 destroys cancer cells, it does not remove tumors. This is because healthy cells layer over cancer cells when a tumor is growing. Even if all of the cancer cells are destroyed, the healthy cells will remain, and will result in a benign tumor (benign breast tumors are examples of a cancerous tumor that was destroyed by the human
body, and the healthy cells keep layering). So, the fact that the tumor didn't appreciably grow tells me that I beat the cancer. I'll bet a years salary that if a biopsy were performed on that tumor, it would be found benign, however I refused to desecrate Belle's body for this.
So, a benign tumor remained on her heart and resulted in cardiac failure of the right side of Belle's heart. This resulted in a fluid backup inside her chest, which was putting pressure on her digestive system. We had the fluid drained and she was given some medicine to try and control this condition. A week later, we had to have it drained again. A week later...again. A week ago, she began to get fluid backup in her abdomen too. This whole time Belle continued to lose weight. At the beginning of April, she weighed 53 pounds. Two weeks ago, she was down to 43 pounds. I think she's probably lost at least another 5 pounds since then...she was nothing but skin and bones with a bloated chest and abdomen. The Vet told my wife and I that Belle was suffering. That there was nothing more he could do. That she needed to be put down. So Yesterday at 4:15pm, our Beloved Belle was put to sleep. It was the hardest decision and day in my entire life.
So...what can you do about your dog? Get Sophie to a specialist and get an echo-cardiogram done...because I'll bet my paycheck that she' having heart problems. I pray it's not cancer...because it's a tough and expensive fight...and if she's got a tumor on her heart...it may all be for naught.
My prayers are with you...we miss our Belle more than I thought possible...and we are still greaving heavily!! If the picture posted...it was taken at C+8 months (Cancer+8 months).
Later,
On Tuesday (after Memorial day), she came up to me in my home office and nudged my arm...which told me she wanted to play Frisbee. We went out back and I got maybe five throws in when it happened again. I immediately raced her to another vet who specialized in Internal Medicine. They ran an EKG and there was a heart armithmia (sp?). So they did an Echo-Cardiogram. There was a cancerous tumor on her heart. The vet diagnosed it to be Harmongio Sarcoma and said that surgery and radiation were out of the question because of it's location. So we gave Chemo a try but with no result, and 2 weeks later the tumor had grown another 4 mm in size. The vet gave her 2-3 months to live saying there was nothing she could do for Belle.
I refused to accept this answer, and did some research. There are those who believe that the cure for cancer has been known since 1953. That cancer is not some misterious desease, but is a vitamin deficency desease like Skurvy or Polagra (sorry...my spelling is horrible). I figured, what the heck...got nothing to loose, so I ordered the vitamin (only place I could find it was on the web) and ordered the book on it, "A World Without Cancer" by G. Edward Griffin. You can buy it at Amazon.com:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/A...0851000/sr=1-3/ref=sc_b_3/104-5473209-9719901
Or from the author's web site:
http://www.realityzone.com/worwitcan.html
A month later, we had another echo-cardiogram (Belle's 3rd) and the tumor's growth had slowed...it was only 2mm larger after a full month. We got more agressive with the B-17 teatments.
Fast forward to April of this year...Belle was STILL alive and doing GREAT!!! Shortly after this...she started to feel below the weather so I took her to the vet who was absolutely AMAZED that she was still alive!!! He told me that it was virtually unheard of for a dog with Harmongio Sarcoma to live a year past diagnoses...and extremely rare for them to live past 6 months...and we were sitting at 11 months!! He figured she was suffering from alergies (I had forgotten about her hay fever) and so we took her home and treated her for alergies, but her appetite dropped off and she refused to eat. I initially thought she had a blockage in her digestive system because she had gotten into the trash. We finally decided that we'd better get an internal check-up to determine if she did have a blockage, but it turned out that it wasn't a blockage after all.
After the tests, it was determined that the tumor remained on her heart. It had not grown very much...but it still remained, and it had stressed Belle's heart to the point of failure.
Now, at this point, I think I should point out something that I read in the book mentioned above....although B-17 destroys cancer cells, it does not remove tumors. This is because healthy cells layer over cancer cells when a tumor is growing. Even if all of the cancer cells are destroyed, the healthy cells will remain, and will result in a benign tumor (benign breast tumors are examples of a cancerous tumor that was destroyed by the human
body, and the healthy cells keep layering). So, the fact that the tumor didn't appreciably grow tells me that I beat the cancer. I'll bet a years salary that if a biopsy were performed on that tumor, it would be found benign, however I refused to desecrate Belle's body for this.
So, a benign tumor remained on her heart and resulted in cardiac failure of the right side of Belle's heart. This resulted in a fluid backup inside her chest, which was putting pressure on her digestive system. We had the fluid drained and she was given some medicine to try and control this condition. A week later, we had to have it drained again. A week later...again. A week ago, she began to get fluid backup in her abdomen too. This whole time Belle continued to lose weight. At the beginning of April, she weighed 53 pounds. Two weeks ago, she was down to 43 pounds. I think she's probably lost at least another 5 pounds since then...she was nothing but skin and bones with a bloated chest and abdomen. The Vet told my wife and I that Belle was suffering. That there was nothing more he could do. That she needed to be put down. So Yesterday at 4:15pm, our Beloved Belle was put to sleep. It was the hardest decision and day in my entire life.
So...what can you do about your dog? Get Sophie to a specialist and get an echo-cardiogram done...because I'll bet my paycheck that she' having heart problems. I pray it's not cancer...because it's a tough and expensive fight...and if she's got a tumor on her heart...it may all be for naught.
My prayers are with you...we miss our Belle more than I thought possible...and we are still greaving heavily!! If the picture posted...it was taken at C+8 months (Cancer+8 months).
Later,