pyloric stenosis
I am dealing with our boxer, Sophie, vomiting bile and appreciate all the info on this forum, we have another appointment today as she is not eating so I assume that is why it is bile-shes starving! We have had her on 3 quality foods that the vet recommended and nothing is working-she is now on prednisone and pepsid. I hate prednisone as it really just masks symptoms not a permanent solution. My actual point here was I also had a boxer, Ginger
who vomited undigested food and found to have pyloric stenosis which is a narrowing where the esophagus ends. She had surgery and did incredibly better, essentually, dilating the esophagus, we also fed her a food that was smaller bits that was easier to pass to her stomach. Ginger had other issues
too, which we were not aware of, she was a very pretty dog who had been bred to show but her lower jaw stuck out so the breeder then sold her to us -pet quality (thats what she called it). Unfortunately, Ginger died at the way too early age of 4, she was found to have cardiomyopathy and went into congestive heart failure. It was horrible. I never thought there could be another dog as sweet as Ginger, she was so good. Now we have Sophie and we now know these are just the truly best dogs in the world, she is just as sweet and it kills me to now start having problems as I can't even imagine not having her. Sorry so long a story, thanks for listening.
I am dealing with our boxer, Sophie, vomiting bile and appreciate all the info on this forum, we have another appointment today as she is not eating so I assume that is why it is bile-shes starving! We have had her on 3 quality foods that the vet recommended and nothing is working-she is now on prednisone and pepsid. I hate prednisone as it really just masks symptoms not a permanent solution. My actual point here was I also had a boxer, Ginger
who vomited undigested food and found to have pyloric stenosis which is a narrowing where the esophagus ends. She had surgery and did incredibly better, essentually, dilating the esophagus, we also fed her a food that was smaller bits that was easier to pass to her stomach. Ginger had other issues
too, which we were not aware of, she was a very pretty dog who had been bred to show but her lower jaw stuck out so the breeder then sold her to us -pet quality (thats what she called it). Unfortunately, Ginger died at the way too early age of 4, she was found to have cardiomyopathy and went into congestive heart failure. It was horrible. I never thought there could be another dog as sweet as Ginger, she was so good. Now we have Sophie and we now know these are just the truly best dogs in the world, she is just as sweet and it kills me to now start having problems as I can't even imagine not having her. Sorry so long a story, thanks for listening.