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Go buddy, go! Its a blessing that he is letting you know right away that he is happy to frap another day. Losing the leg is just a hiccup on his happy road.
It is so hard to love these creatures sometimes. They offer incredible love and companionship yet it's terribly difficult to realize how quickly they pass from our lives. I can't imagine losing Petey. In fact, I can't think of anything worse especially after a series of unexpected losses over the last two years. He got me through all of them in a way no person possibly could have. Just there, always there, always happy, never less than a beautiful little miracle.
My heart goes out to you and your daughter.
Well, it has been a long few weeks here... Buddy is on his third and final chemo option. As previously posted, he did not tolerate the new drug they tried him on when the chest mets were found. He received a single dose of adriamycin at his February chemo visit. It made him so ill that we feared the chemo would be more than he could snap back from. He was seen on an emergency basis by our regular vet twice following that chemo visit. Given the nasty nature of that dose we were hopeful that it was strong enough to arrest his recently discovered chest mets- but, no such luck. In late March a repeat xray showed that one of the two mets grew by about 20% in 3 weeks. As of that visit Buddy had about 20% of that lung affected by the lung metastisis.
We opted to begin Buddy on palladia, which is an oral chemo that we administer at home every other day. It is the last good option to beat the tumors that appeared following the removal of the original osteoscarcoma that was Buddy's "root" cancer. SO far, so good- no illness side effects from this drug to date. This particular drug has been offered to oncology vets to utilize in canine trials specifically, even though the drug is meant for human treatment. This drug has been demonstrated to arrest and shrink tumors in tissue very effectively and rapidly. We will repeat Buddy's chest xray in 2 days- Holy Thursday. I am prayerfully hoping for our own miracle- that the palladia works! If the tumors arrest or shrink we repeat CBC and continue on the palladia. I just can not think of any other outcome... say your prayers and rub your lucky corgi bellies- Buddy needs all of the poitive canine energy the universe has! We will keep you posted. Thank you all for your support and kind words. Buddy still is chasing his squirrels and tennis balls- life is good ,even with only three legs.
It's so heart wrenching to read this. I feel very badly for Buddy and your family. All I can do is pit us in your place and it's too much to consider. Petey and I do hope for the best. And, yes, his belly got scratched for you.
Preston and Pete
What Cyndy didn't say is that with all of this she found time to save a stray. While he isn't a Corgi he is smart enough to know help when he sees it. He appeared in the Publix parking lot a week ago Monday dirty and without a collar. She took him to animal control in an effort to find his owners. No one claimed him so she picked him up and is now "fostering" him. She got him to the vet for a rabies shot and has found him a place in a no kill shelter if she doesn't fit in their home.
I am working on an album for the pictures she has sent of her two corgis and "Dog". As of yesterday afternoon she was trying not to get too attached and so has refused to name him. HA! HA1
It's been a rollercoaster for me reading your posts, Cyndy....I can't even begin to imagine how it has been for you and your family. Buddy is truly blessed to have a family like yours. Thank you for including me (well, all of us) in Buddy's fight. It makes me feel like he's a part of my family, too.
Oh, major and many belly rubs x 3 in Buddy's name coming his way!
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