It's not Sidney! No worries there. This is in regards to my sister's Golden Retriever. She rescued him this spring from a shelter in Mexico. Yesterday he could not get up...this came on suddenly..and he was running a fever. They had to carry him to the car to get him to the emergency vet. He stayed overnight and they said it's auto immune inflammation.

I was wondering if any of you have experience with this and what my sister can expect in regards to his treatment. He's only two years old, poor thing! Natalie, is this what Lance has?

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Do you have a more specific diagnosis?  In humans, auto-immune inflammation encompasses rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis, scleroderma, and a whole host of other illnesses.  The part of the body being attacked helps define the disease.  Auto-immune reactions can basically occur to most parts of the body, including organs, joints, muscles, and skin.  In people, the prognosis definitely depends on what is being attacked.  I'm assuming the same is true in dogs. 

Hi Geri,

what part of the body is getting inflammed.  Yes this is what Lance has, and his ears are the thing being affected. 

Like other's have said it definitely depends on what is being attacked. We frequently see auto-immune disorders that affect the blood which wil cause significant weakness as well as the risk of internal bleeding. Generally the treatment for any auto-immune disorder will be some type of medication, such as a steroid, to decrease the immune response. Many dogs can live perfectly normal lives with these conditions and some dogs can have a one time episode of an auto-immune disorder and never have a problem again. It really depends on the actual diagnosis. We had a dog come in a few months ago that had an auto-immune condition that presented just like meningitis, the dog ended up almost dying and after he recovered he was blind, and yet we had another dog last week that was hospitalized for 3 days due to an auto-immune disorder and went home and is doing totally fine at home and the doctor's don't expect any relapse in the future. Please get more details if you can. Poor pup.

HI guys,

It's his joints, systematic.

Steroids are standard treatment but can't be given long term.  Frequently things like this flare and then go away for awhile and then come back, though sometimes it's more chronic.   Can be anywhere from mild to disabling, honestly.  I'm more familiar with the human versions (since I have inflammatory arthritis-- ankylosing spondylitis) but I imagine it's pretty much the same in dogs.  

Mild ongoing exercise is very important.  Swimming would be ideal.


Sorry to hear about your sister's dog and hopefully things will improve.  :-(

There are immune-modifying medications for humans.  They are very effective but prohibitively expensive and therefore have not been used in animals to the best of my knowledge (except for testing human drugs, of course). 

NSAIDS can help with symptoms, so I'd think Rimadyl might help, but the vet would have to decide that.

Have they tested for tick bourne diseases? Those often cause joint inflammation and are easily treated with a long course of antibiotics. There are several immune suppressive medications you can give to dogs, but as Beth said, they are expensive and do tend to open doors for other health problems. Hopefully they can get to the bottom if the illness and its just a one time flare up.

RED FLAG WARNING!  This sounds so much like a TICK DISEASE!!!!!!   I have had this happen to 2 of my dogs and a couple of friends dogs too....START DOXY ANTI-BIOTIC ASAP.  If its not a tick disease, it won't hurt.  Has the vet not run a tick test?  Sometimes they can be neg but I would insist on the Doxy.  I have not heard of autoimmune diseases in canines so I really don't have any advise for that, however, I am VERY familiar with automimmune in ppl...I have Rheumatoid Autoimmune Disease (aka Rheumatoid Arthritis..RA...it is not your grandma's arthritis, that is OA, totally different)...Beth, I have a good friend with AS too...rotten diseases:(~  I am really leaning toward Lymes in this pup and would be insistant on the doxy. The description of how he went down sounds too similiar to both of mine that did.  Its important to treat these tick things asap as they can cause many problems down the road if left untreated too long. 

Thanks guys!

My sister says:

"Yes he was tested for Erlichia and two other tick born diseases in may and again now and both were negative. JUST in case it was some odd form of it they don't test for, they have him on antibiotics to treat it just in case"

Rocky is feeling MUCH better today, in fact he's back to his old self :)

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