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k9krazee
08-11-2006, 09:36 PM
((Changed the title...used to be :( Bad News...)))

Leptospirosis...We found out that that's what Micki has :( :( :( There are 7 strains of it, he tested positive for four. The worst part is it's contagious...to humans and other animals. O..M...G. I was sick last weekend (chills, high fever, headache) exactly the symptoms of this disease, I'm fine now but it's known to go dormat. We're getting antibiotics for all of us, and getting the dogs vaccinated for 2 of the strains Micki has (there isn't a vaccination for the other two) and all we can do is watch for symptoms in the other guys and rush them immediately in if they change.

:(

I'm going to be gone all weekend, so I won't get a chance to update until Monday. But here's a little info on the disease if you're curious.

--------------------
Leptospirosis is a bacterial disease that affects many species of animals as well as human beings. Leptospirosis occurs throughout the World. The organism belongs to a phylum called spirochaetes, distinctive bacteria with long, helically coiled bodies. They can be recognized by the presence of flagella or ribbons running lengthwise down the cell and called axial filaments. These filament causes a twisting, spiral motion as the organism moves about. Most spirochaetes are free-living without oxygen (anaerobic) with only the Leptospira, the Borrelia of Lyme disease and the Treponema of human syphilis causing disease.
There are approximately 230 serologically distinct forms of the genus and species, Leptospira interrogans, which are called serovars. Nine serovars are known to cause disease in dogs. They are Leptospira icterohaemorrhagiae, L. canicola, L. grippotyphosa, L. pomona, L. bratislava, L. automnalis, L. bataviae, L. hardjo, and L. grippotyphosa . The first four serovars are most commonly isolated from dogs. In North America, the disease is perpetuated in domestic cows, horses and pigs and in wildlife that include mice, rats, raccoons, opossums, fox, skunk, deer, and woodchucks.
Transmission
Dogs become infected with leptospira through contact with the urine of infected animals. Stagnant water, contaminated with urine is a common source of infection as are rats. The organism can also be transmitted through mating, bites, and the consumption of infected carcasses. There are documented cases where transmission from parent to offspring occurred through the womb. Transmission is greatest during periods of wet weather.
Dynamics Of The Disease
Leptospira gain entrance to the bloodstream through mucous membranes or wounds. It takes 4-12 days for symptoms to occur. Once in the blood stream the organisms spread rapidly to body organs that include the liver, spleen and kidneys. The nervous system, genital tract and eyes also harbor leptospira. As the dog fights the disease by producing antibody, the organisms are cleared from most of the organs, remaining only in the kidneys from which they are shed for weeks or months in the urine. When death occurs it is often due to destruction of the liver (hepatitis). Liver necrosis is most common in dogs less than six months old. L. pomona and L. icterohaemorrhagiae have a predilection for the liver while L. canicola and L. grippotyphosa often spare the liver but colonize the kidneys. When people become infected , one third obtain the infection through contact with carrier dogs while another third contract the disease from contact with rats.

Symptoms of Leptospirosis
The first signs of leptospirosis are fever and depression. Dogs developing this disease are cold and shiver. They appear to ache and be tender all over. Soon they develop fevers of 103-104 degrees Fahrenheit. Joint pain and excessive bleeding sometimes occur. The dogs stop eating and drinking and often drool and vomit. Through vomission they loose fluids and become dehydrated. Dogs with fulminating infections soon become subnormal in temperature (hypothermia) and may die before signs of kidney and liver failure develop. In other dogs, infection of the kidneys leads to blood tinged reddish urine, oral ulcers and uremia. Inflammation of the covering of the brain (meningitis), inflammation of the iris and ciliary body of the eye (uveitis) and abortion have all been reported.
Dogs with more moderate cases of the disease soon drink water excessively. Their tenderness and reluctance to move is due to painful swollen kidneys. In those with liver involvement, the membranes that line the mouth and surround the eyes become yellowish (icteric, jaundiced). The majority of these dogs go on to recover in two or three weeks but a few permanently loose kidney function and die slowly from waste product overload (uremia). The dogs that recover can shed leptospira in their urine for months or even years. In these dogs the organism continues to live in the kidneys and reproductive organs.
Blood samples taken from dogs well into the disease process often show an elevated white blood cell count and a deficiency in thrombocytes which causes bleeding. Blood serum chemistry values often show kidney damage (elevated BUN and creatinine) and liver damage (elevated AST, ALT, Alkaline Phosphatase and bilirubin). Urine obtained from infected dogs may contain blood, protein and sugar reflecting damage to the kidney’s tubular filtering apparatus.
Diagnosis
Leptospirosis is diagnosed through test of the blood serum that measure the level of antibody present as well as the identity the strain of leptospira present. Fluorescent antibody tests or polymerase chain reaction tests identify the serovar responsible for causing the dog’s disease. The microscopic agglutination test or MAT is the most common test for antibody. It takes at least ten days for the dog to begin to produce antibody against the disease and several tests may be necessary to confirm the diagnosis. While a serum titer of 1:800 or more makes the disease highly likely a second test should be performed showing a rising titer in order to confirm that the infection is active. Recent leptospirosis vaccination can cloud the diagnosis. Occasionally, the bacteria can be isolated from the urine of infected dogs. A procedure called darkfield microscopy can identify leptospira in the urine sample. When the disease spreads to the dog’s owner the initial signs are fever, headaches, rash, myalgia and malaise.
Treatment
The first line of treatment of leptospirosis is to provide the dog with a suitable antibiotic. The penicillin class of antibiotics works well against leptospirosis (Penicillin G procaine 10,000-20,000 units/lb injected intramuscularly twice a day). After the acute phase of leptospirosis has passed, the drug of choice to prevent carrier states is doxycycline (1.5-2.5mg/lb twice a day orally). The newer fluoroquinolone antibiotics such as enrofloxacin and ciprofloxacin (2.5-10mg/lb/day) are also effective in treatment and elimination of carrier states. In addition to antibiotic therapy, medications are administered to stem vomiting and intravenous and subcutaneous fluids are give to correct dehydration. Dogs that die of the disease often do due to kidney failure. To prevent this, copious intravenous fluids help flush out the kidneys and prevent their destruction. When this is not sufficient and toxic waste products continue to build up in the dog’s body, hemodialysis has been effective in saving their lives.
Vaccination And Prevention
Limiting exposure to leptospira necessitates draining or fencing off sources of contaminated water. Vermin need to be eliminated from residential and rural areas. The best way to do this is to seal and protect all sources of feed that rodents and other vermin utilize.
The vaccines available for dogs are all killed extracts of leptospira. Most contain four of the nine serovars, L. canicola, L. icterohaemorrhagiae, L. grippotyphosa and L. pomona.
These bacterial extracts are usually marketed combined with living, attenuated (weakened) virus of canine distemper and parvovirus. When a vaccine reaction occurs in a dog, it is usually the leptospira extract or the antibiotic preservative that is the cause.
The leptospira portion of these vaccines produces six to eight months of immunity in dogs. Therefore, dogs kept in high exposure areas should be vaccinated twice yearly.
I begin by vaccinating puppies at 9, 12 and 16 weeks of age. Leptospirosis vaccination is optional in house pets that are unlikely to be exposed to the disease.
Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine no longer recommends that household urban dogs be vaccinated for leptospirosis. They give several reasons for this new recommendation:
1) The disease has become quite rare in the urban dog.
2) A more important reason is the frequency with which we see hives, facial swelling and even life-threatening vaccination reactions called anaphylaxis when we give vaccine “cocktails” that contain leptospirosis bacteria. The ”L” in DHLP, the most common vaccine cocktail, stands for leptospirosis. These reactions can be very mild or severe enough to cause death. These reactions do not occur on the initial vaccination but do increasingly on succeeding vaccinations.
3) The third reason is that the vaccines against leptospirosis are not that effective in preventing the disease and may actually facilitate carrier states.

luvofallhorses
08-11-2006, 09:46 PM
I am so sorry! :( It's curable right? I hope you all feel better soon! ((hugs))

Dorothy39
08-11-2006, 10:10 PM
My Gosh!!!! You "Were" sick!!!!! :eek:

Thank God this can be treated!!!! Hope your other dogs are in the clear!!!

Poor Little Micki!!! He sure has been through a lot!!!


Thanks for that information k9krazee.

Miss Z
08-12-2006, 05:47 AM
Oh no! I am so sorry :( ((hugs)) to you and gentle pats for Micki.

KYS
08-12-2006, 06:31 AM
Wishing Micki get well wishes for a speedy recover and fingers crossed
that the others do not get this disease.

I did not realize their were different strains.
From what you posted, even giving your dogs their shots does not guarrantee. :(

Sending (((^..^))))

zoey
08-12-2006, 06:41 AM
...Sending **hugs and prayers** out to Micki and the rest of your family. I hope the treatment goes well.

chocolatepuppy
08-12-2006, 07:07 AM
Pawsitive thoughts and prayers headed out to Micki.

Alysser
08-12-2006, 07:09 AM
Oh no, poor Micki. I'm so sorry. (((HUGS))) and good thoughts going your way, Please tell me this is curable! Wishing Micki a speedy recovery.

pitc9
08-12-2006, 08:07 AM
Oh no! Hugs and prayers to you all!!!
I just had my pups vaccinated for it.
I don't vaccinate every year (parvo, distemper..etc) but I do for rabies and Leptospirosis. It is VERY active in our area

Maltese_Love- No, there is no cure but there are treatments for it to help stop the damage to the kidneys. :(

Curiousdish
08-12-2006, 08:48 AM
I'm very sorry to hear about Micki.......
Christine, Digby & Scrappy



Leptospirosis...We found out that that's what Micki has :( :( :( There are 7 strains of it, he tested positive for four. The worst part is it's contagious...to humans and other animals. O..M...G. I was sick last weekend (chills, high fever, headache) exactly the symptoms of this disease, I'm fine now but it's known to go dormat. We're getting antibiotics for all of us, and getting the dogs vaccinated for 2 of the strains Micki has (there isn't a vaccination for the other two) and all we can do is watch for symptoms in the other guys and rush them immediately in if they change.

:(

I'm going to be gone all weekend, so I won't get a chance to update until Monday. But here's a little info on the disease if you're curious.

--------------------
Leptospirosis is a bacterial disease that affects many species of animals as well as human beings. Leptospirosis occurs throughout the World. The organism belongs to a phylum called spirochaetes, distinctive bacteria with long, helically coiled bodies. They can be recognized by the presence of flagella or ribbons running lengthwise down the cell and called axial filaments. These filament causes a twisting, spiral motion as the organism moves about. Most spirochaetes are free-living without oxygen (anaerobic) with only the Leptospira, the Borrelia of Lyme disease and the Treponema of human syphilis causing disease.
There are approximately 230 serologically distinct forms of the genus and species, Leptospira interrogans, which are called serovars. Nine serovars are known to cause disease in dogs. They are Leptospira icterohaemorrhagiae, L. canicola, L. grippotyphosa, L. pomona, L. bratislava, L. automnalis, L. bataviae, L. hardjo, and L. grippotyphosa . The first four serovars are most commonly isolated from dogs. In North America, the disease is perpetuated in domestic cows, horses and pigs and in wildlife that include mice, rats, raccoons, opossums, fox, skunk, deer, and woodchucks.
Transmission
Dogs become infected with leptospira through contact with the urine of infected animals. Stagnant water, contaminated with urine is a common source of infection as are rats. The organism can also be transmitted through mating, bites, and the consumption of infected carcasses. There are documented cases where transmission from parent to offspring occurred through the womb. Transmission is greatest during periods of wet weather.
Dynamics Of The Disease
Leptospira gain entrance to the bloodstream through mucous membranes or wounds. It takes 4-12 days for symptoms to occur. Once in the blood stream the organisms spread rapidly to body organs that include the liver, spleen and kidneys. The nervous system, genital tract and eyes also harbor leptospira. As the dog fights the disease by producing antibody, the organisms are cleared from most of the organs, remaining only in the kidneys from which they are shed for weeks or months in the urine. When death occurs it is often due to destruction of the liver (hepatitis). Liver necrosis is most common in dogs less than six months old. L. pomona and L. icterohaemorrhagiae have a predilection for the liver while L. canicola and L. grippotyphosa often spare the liver but colonize the kidneys. When people become infected , one third obtain the infection through contact with carrier dogs while another third contract the disease from contact with rats.

Symptoms of Leptospirosis
The first signs of leptospirosis are fever and depression. Dogs developing this disease are cold and shiver. They appear to ache and be tender all over. Soon they develop fevers of 103-104 degrees Fahrenheit. Joint pain and excessive bleeding sometimes occur. The dogs stop eating and drinking and often drool and vomit. Through vomission they loose fluids and become dehydrated. Dogs with fulminating infections soon become subnormal in temperature (hypothermia) and may die before signs of kidney and liver failure develop. In other dogs, infection of the kidneys leads to blood tinged reddish urine, oral ulcers and uremia. Inflammation of the covering of the brain (meningitis), inflammation of the iris and ciliary body of the eye (uveitis) and abortion have all been reported.
Dogs with more moderate cases of the disease soon drink water excessively. Their tenderness and reluctance to move is due to painful swollen kidneys. In those with liver involvement, the membranes that line the mouth and surround the eyes become yellowish (icteric, jaundiced). The majority of these dogs go on to recover in two or three weeks but a few permanently loose kidney function and die slowly from waste product overload (uremia). The dogs that recover can shed leptospira in their urine for months or even years. In these dogs the organism continues to live in the kidneys and reproductive organs.
Blood samples taken from dogs well into the disease process often show an elevated white blood cell count and a deficiency in thrombocytes which causes bleeding. Blood serum chemistry values often show kidney damage (elevated BUN and creatinine) and liver damage (elevated AST, ALT, Alkaline Phosphatase and bilirubin). Urine obtained from infected dogs may contain blood, protein and sugar reflecting damage to the kidney’s tubular filtering apparatus.
Diagnosis
Leptospirosis is diagnosed through test of the blood serum that measure the level of antibody present as well as the identity the strain of leptospira present. Fluorescent antibody tests or polymerase chain reaction tests identify the serovar responsible for causing the dog’s disease. The microscopic agglutination test or MAT is the most common test for antibody. It takes at least ten days for the dog to begin to produce antibody against the disease and several tests may be necessary to confirm the diagnosis. While a serum titer of 1:800 or more makes the disease highly likely a second test should be performed showing a rising titer in order to confirm that the infection is active. Recent leptospirosis vaccination can cloud the diagnosis. Occasionally, the bacteria can be isolated from the urine of infected dogs. A procedure called darkfield microscopy can identify leptospira in the urine sample. When the disease spreads to the dog’s owner the initial signs are fever, headaches, rash, myalgia and malaise.
Treatment
The first line of treatment of leptospirosis is to provide the dog with a suitable antibiotic. The penicillin class of antibiotics works well against leptospirosis (Penicillin G procaine 10,000-20,000 units/lb injected intramuscularly twice a day). After the acute phase of leptospirosis has passed, the drug of choice to prevent carrier states is doxycycline (1.5-2.5mg/lb twice a day orally). The newer fluoroquinolone antibiotics such as enrofloxacin and ciprofloxacin (2.5-10mg/lb/day) are also effective in treatment and elimination of carrier states. In addition to antibiotic therapy, medications are administered to stem vomiting and intravenous and subcutaneous fluids are give to correct dehydration. Dogs that die of the disease often do due to kidney failure. To prevent this, copious intravenous fluids help flush out the kidneys and prevent their destruction. When this is not sufficient and toxic waste products continue to build up in the dog’s body, hemodialysis has been effective in saving their lives.
Vaccination And Prevention
Limiting exposure to leptospira necessitates draining or fencing off sources of contaminated water. Vermin need to be eliminated from residential and rural areas. The best way to do this is to seal and protect all sources of feed that rodents and other vermin utilize.
The vaccines available for dogs are all killed extracts of leptospira. Most contain four of the nine serovars, L. canicola, L. icterohaemorrhagiae, L. grippotyphosa and L. pomona.
These bacterial extracts are usually marketed combined with living, attenuated (weakened) virus of canine distemper and parvovirus. When a vaccine reaction occurs in a dog, it is usually the leptospira extract or the antibiotic preservative that is the cause.
The leptospira portion of these vaccines produces six to eight months of immunity in dogs. Therefore, dogs kept in high exposure areas should be vaccinated twice yearly.
I begin by vaccinating puppies at 9, 12 and 16 weeks of age. Leptospirosis vaccination is optional in house pets that are unlikely to be exposed to the disease.
Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine no longer recommends that household urban dogs be vaccinated for leptospirosis. They give several reasons for this new recommendation:
1) The disease has become quite rare in the urban dog.
2) A more important reason is the frequency with which we see hives, facial swelling and even life-threatening vaccination reactions called anaphylaxis when we give vaccine “cocktails” that contain leptospirosis bacteria. The ”L” in DHLP, the most common vaccine cocktail, stands for leptospirosis. These reactions can be very mild or severe enough to cause death. These reactions do not occur on the initial vaccination but do increasingly on succeeding vaccinations.
3) The third reason is that the vaccines against leptospirosis are not that effective in preventing the disease and may actually facilitate carrier states.

dragondawg
08-12-2006, 06:19 PM
The Clover dog enjoys wallowing in this one certain mudhole - created by an unrooted 40 ft oak tree by a hurricane back in 95. Didn't want to take a chance of some infected raccoon making a raccoon boo-boo in the mudhole which might be ingested. It's not a common disease for dogs, but it's out there.

wolf_Q
08-12-2006, 06:23 PM
I'm very sorry to hear this. :( I hope the other dogs won't get it as well. At least you know what you are dealing with now. Lots of well wishes to sweet Micki boy!!

Karen
08-12-2006, 06:39 PM
How sad, but at least you can now take precautions for the other dogs, and hopefully help Micki fight this. You might want to let dog-owning neighbors know as well, in case it's something he picked up in the nighborhood, they'd want their dogs safe, too.

Poor Micki! Give him a kiss on that spotty tummy for me, okay?

Danegirl2208
08-12-2006, 06:51 PM
oh, poor Micki :( i am so sorry..hugs and prayers from our family

Ginger's Mom
08-12-2006, 07:51 PM
I am so sorry. I will definitely include Micki (and all of your family and dogs) in my prayers. Hope that you caught it early enough that there is minimal damage to his liver and kidneys, and that the other furkids are fine. {{{Hugs}}}

lv4dogs
08-14-2006, 12:05 PM
Oh poor Micki & poor you. I never knew there were different strains, I thought there was only one and that the "L" in DHLPP was the vaccine for the only Lepto they could get.
I hope you caught this early enough so there is no long term damage.

As I understand it, Lepto goes dormant yet will always remain in your system. I take it you will always have to be careful around other people & dogs? Can it flare up at any time?

I wish yous the best of luck. Hope Micki & you heal up fine & quickly and no one else is infected. HUGS to you all!

.sarah
08-14-2006, 01:27 PM
I'm so sorry Ashley :( I hope everything turns out okay. I'll be keeping you both in my thoughts.

Jadapit
08-14-2006, 01:31 PM
Gosh, how awful! I hope everything turns out ok for your family and the fur kids. You all will be in my thoughts. (((Hugs)))

lizbud
08-14-2006, 04:32 PM
I'm so sorry to hear this. :( Poor little guy. You both will be in my prayers.

k9krazee
08-17-2006, 11:20 AM
I'm happy to say that Micki is doing fantastic! :D :D :D :D :D :D :D He's acting completely normal, running, playing, barking...being naughty. He still won't eat normal food, but we've been feeding him chicken (boiled...I did feed him some raw but my mom freaked out :rolleyes: ) and he devours it.

We took the rest of the crew in today and they all got thier Lepto shot. It came as part of the Distemper...I found out that they just normally give the shot without Lepto unless you specifically ask for it. Weird.

I wanted to thank you all for the thoughts and prayers! They are greatly appreciated!!

Karen
08-17-2006, 11:21 AM
Oh, yay! That does my heart good to hear he's even being naughty again! Now THAT's the Micki we know! :)

lizbud
08-17-2006, 11:58 AM
I'm so happy for Micki. Go boy. :D

Flatcoatluver
08-17-2006, 12:33 PM
I am so thrilled to hear he is doing better, he had me so worried!

Ginger's Mom
08-17-2006, 12:53 PM
Oh Yay! I am so glad to hear that he is doing better. I really was worried about that little guy. Now Micki you have to start eating right too, okay?

Jadapit
08-17-2006, 01:25 PM
I'm so happy for you both! :D

lv4dogs
08-17-2006, 02:22 PM
Thats great news! Hope everything continues to improve.

Catlady711
08-17-2006, 02:29 PM
We took the rest of the crew in today and they all got thier Lepto shot. It came as part of the Distemper...I found out that they just normally give the shot without Lepto unless you specifically ask for it. Weird.


Glad to hear your dog is doing better.

As for the Lepto vaccine, not all vets use the same combinations of vaccines or for all strains (depends on area and vet preference each vet does things a little differently).

At our hosp. we use the DHLP-PC (distemper, hepetitis, lepto(including newer strains), parvo, parva, and corona). This is standard at our hospital, the only exception being if an animal has had a reaction to either the lepto or corona vaccines in the past, then we just use the DHP-P, but those are rare.

Lepto vacines need to be done yearly as a booster beyond the 'puppy shots'. The other vaccines DHPPC can be done with less frequency IF the dog is 3-4 years old or older, AND had recieved the entire series of 'puppy shots' at a young age, AND has been given it's boosters yearly since that time. There are more studies indicating some of the vaccines last longer than 1 year, but only tested under those conditions, and does NOT include the Lepto vaccine.

It's always important to know which vaccines your pet is getting. If you are unsure, or don't know what those vaccines are for, just ask. Most vets or their staff will be happy to provide you with an explanation and/or literature on what your pet is getting and why. :)

gemini9961
08-18-2006, 01:03 PM
Ashley, this is good news, well good that you know what it is and are getting everyone treated for it. I'm sure you are relieved. Give Micki and all the others some hugs and kisses from me. Glad to hear he is doing so much better.

Pembroke_Corgi
08-19-2006, 10:27 AM
I'm so sorry, I just saw this now. I'm sorry to hear that Micki has something contagious, but I'm very glad to hear that he's doing better! I hope everything continues to go well for everyone.

pitc9
08-19-2006, 11:24 AM
Yippee!!

sabies
09-01-2006, 01:56 PM
Good news :) :) :)!