Chemo…

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After our fall last week, things have continued to improve. We are taking small walks, learning to eat busy bones one-handed, and the incision looks amazing. Chemotherapy is scheduled for Thursday. I’ve been told many times that dogs tolerate carboplatin well, but I’ve also run into a couple whose doberman did poorly with it. I’m nervous. What sorts of experiences have people on this site had with osteosarcoma chemo? I know there are some long term survivors here, and I know that it’s a small minority, but my main concern is Romulus and his quality of life, with a hope but not a demand of survival. I’m just trying to figure out what to expect!

Over the hump, but not off the hill yet…

right after I realized we were locked out and needed a distraction...
right after I realized we were locked out and needed a distraction…

Romulus fell tonight. It was my fault; I took him outside to go potty and locked us out. So he had no good place to rest, and being only post op day 6, he still has low stamina. As the locksmith arrived we’d been outside for over an hour, and as he did his tripod hop to the door, he just tipped over. He landed on his amputation site, and his cry about ripped my heart right out of my chest. I examined him – no broken stitches, wound is healing nicely, and no fluid pocket like a hematoma developed. Once we got in, he got his meds, we iced him down, and he seems fine… he immediately passed out though and is now sleeping peacefully. I, on the other hand, probably won’t sleep well and am quite shaken.

Treatment: Step 1

Romulus had his surgery yesterday. I got to pick him up today after the vet called:

“He’s already been up and for a walk outside to go potty. (laughter) He’s a really strong dog!”

Rom is clearly freaked out a little, but seems comfortable. He hops up on things just fine – but then realizes he shouldn’t or doesn’t quite know how to hop down. My squat quota will be met by the end of the weekend, I’m certain.

I’m a little freaked out, too. Thankfully I came across this website and know that once he adjusts, we will be good because his confusion tugs pretty strongly at the heart strings.

Oh, my baby. Please let him get through this ok!!!

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Diagnosis

2014-06-19 19.24.10It’s been a busy spring. I’ve interviewing for jobs, and my gorgeous, sweet, goofy Doberman has made many friends in dogsitters. Most recently, one of my coworker’s wives has become his regular person, and she is WONDERFUL.

After my last interview, I got back to my apartment late on April 16, 2016, only to find the toilet wasn’t working… plus I was an hour late getting home due to an airport delay, and I REALLY liked and wanted this job… so I was stressed. Romulus came home the next morning, and his sitter asked if I thought he was limping. As he came into the apartment, I didn’t notice that he was. However, as the day wore on, everytime he got up from the couch he would gimp for a few steps, then get back to a normal gait. I figured he’d strained himself on a walk or was getting arthritis – he is 9 years old, after all.

At the end of the first week I emailed my vet, who said to let him rest a little and if there was no improvement, bring him in. By the end of the second week, his limp was progressing to all the time, with no improvement with walking and now he looked swollen in his right wrist. I booked an appointment for the vet, and my boyfriend picked us up – I’m in Boston and don’t have a car, but the limp was so bad I couldn’t imagine walking him.

During the exam, the vet was reassured by the swelling, but did mention the possibility of sarcoma. We got xrays, and indeed, the leading diagnosis was sarcoma. Chest xrays were next, which, thankfully didn’t show any disease in Rom’s lungs. The vet had a few more things to get ready for us before we left, so as we walked into the waiting room, my first of many sobbing sessions started.

Romulus and I met after he was given up for adoption in St. Louis by a woman who had lost her home. I had just purchased a home with a yard, and was looking for my very first dog to adopt. I’d been to several shelters and met many wonderful animals, but when I saw him, there was an immediate feeling of “we belong together.” Love at first site, in this case, does indeed exist. As soon as the shelter allowed me, I adopted and took him home. The bond was swift and complete. Every day he jumped excitedly at the door when I got home. We got into a great routine of dinner, walking playing. I lost weight. My stress – due almost 100% to the job I was in – decreased. He literally had the same effect on me anti-depressant medications are supposed to have. Eventually, I met a man I would marry, who also had a dog, and he loved Romulus, too – as did my neighbors, coworkers, and anyone else who came across this amazing dog. However, after adopting a 3rd dog into our home, I could no longer easily walk them together, and didn’t have time to walk them separately. My husband would let them play in the yard, but I don’t think it was as good for them or for me as the walks had been. After 5 years together, my marriage ended due to my husband developing a substance abuse problem. My heart felt like it’d been torn from my chest. I had several wonderful friends and a loving family who supported me, but it was Romulus who got me through. The day my now ex moved out, we started walking again. That day we walked too far – Rom chipped a nail and was bleeding by the time we got home. I sprayed his nail with an antibiotic spray, then collapsed on the floor and cried, Romulus cuddled with me all night in that exact spot.

We moved to Boston a few months later, and he lost his yard. But we walked – boy, did we walk. And Boston LOVES Romulus. Not as much as I do, though. This diagnosis tore a whole in my very core. Thankfully, I’ve been able to speak to many vets across the country. Because I cannot stand to see this dog in pain, not being able to walk – his favorite thing in the world – he’s undergoing a forequarter amputation on May 12, 2016. After, since he has no other detectable disease at this time, he’ll get chemotherapy. And I’m determined that his quality of life, for whatever time he has left, is as amazing as I can make it. It’s the least I can do, after all the times he’s saved me.

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