A few weeks ago, I noticed a bump on Beasley's belly and unfortunately, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. A
week ago Friday, my vet removed two boobies, three lymph nodes (one the size of
a baseball) and three more teeth. If you
remember, when I first got her, she already had seven teeth extracted from
trying to eat rocks.
It was a rough night.
Between the pain and coming off the anesthesia, she cried a lot. It was
heartbreaking. I gave her the pain meds
but that didn’t seem to help. Finally around midnight, she was able to sleep.
Overall, it has been a fast recovery. A week later, she’s off the pills, walking
so much better and playing with toys. The large lymph node was under her left front
leg and caused her to limp. Now she’s
running and jumping. So for the time being, she acts like she feels really
good.The lab results came back today and sadly, she has Grade III solid mammary carcinoma. This is the worst kind. Widespread vascular invasion, effacement of lymph nodes and it extends to all tissue margins. It’s not fair. She is just learning to trust and be a dog.
She will greet people at the door, bark at them and then run upstairs and hide. A few times, she has even come back down to bark again. She lets a few of my friends pet her and even high-fived one.
The lab tests have shown that dogs with aggressive carcinoma
have a median survival rate of 2 ½ months.
My vet said 3-6 months.
So I have decided to try chemotherapy. I hesitated because of the reaction people have
but the doses are so low for dogs that side-effects are less common. If they do occur, they are mild. They also don't lose their hair, although it may thin. Like humans, every dog is
different. But I have to try it and see.
One article said that overall, chemotherapy can make a dog
feel better. Many dogs will perk up as soon as treatment begins - leaving their
dog owners thrilled to see the puppies in them come out!
I hope this is the case for her. It won't cure the cancer, it will recur, but it may temporarily kill what's there. And hopefully, give her another year or two. But I know the
bottom line is quality, not quantity. That
was really hard to write but I will do what is best for my little, sweet
Beasley.
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