hello sandra. Lilly is certainly a beautiful girl. I have a blue boy ( and 3 others aged 1 to 15). I have had experience of whippets with problem guts and know just how stressful it is when you think you're getting somewhere only to have them get ill again. i currently have one with protein losing enteropathy - a challenge -but so far we are winning - although it didn't feel that way at 4 o'clock this morning in the garden in my dressing gown!
if you don't mind i would like to tell you my( almost random) thoughts about your situation- which has been on my mind a bit, and what i've done in the past. i think you are probably dealing with a food sensitivity. if your vet is happy that lilly's bloods are fine - ruling out PLE and pancreatitis and her poop also clear then i would be looking to it being a problem with her gut. Small intestine bacterial overgrowth is something to condsider as well - i suspect that is why your vet gave you Tylosin as i think that is the standard treatment .
I would recommend having a look at the website Nutriscan.org. This a place that you can use to carry out food sensitivity testing. I think that it is probably the best available tool at the moment for food related issues. It costs about £300 or so. I have used it twice for different dogs. i wouldn't hesitate to do it again. i feel that if this test had been available years ago i might have had a chance of saving one of our dogs who's gut was ultimately the cause of her demise.
I would be feeding a probiotic, the one i've used is Protexin synbiotic. These capsules have a high amount of both pre and pro biotics . i got them from hyperdrug.com where i get all my doggy supplements and supplies. i also feed Dorwest's Tree Barks Powder. You can phone them for advice-01308 897272 or e-mail them.
with food sensitivities the idea is to feed a novel protein source such as ostrich, venison, kangaroo etc. there are a number of companies out there i am using food from Trovet which i get from petfoodwarehouse.co.uk. i would if possible be feeding raw but sometimes this is not an option .some of the ready made raw products have an awful lot of ingredients in them which may make it more difficult for you to pin down what might be irritating to lilly.
the wet royal canin gastrointestinal does not only contain chicken and rice. it has meat and meat by products, fish and fish by products , veg and veg by products and cereals. this non specific list of ingredients makes it impossible to know what lilly is actually getting. the dry version is a bit better with a shorter list of more specific ingredients listed and might be worth a try.
you say lilly gets mince, if it is beef i think that beef may be one of the more troublesome proteins. i was wondering if the cold mince has less fat in it than the warm mince and may be the amount of fat affects whether she is ill or not.
i wondered if the treats that you feed would be different from the treats at the dog sitters and whether that might hold a clue
i feed my adult whippets two meals a day, i wondered if 3 meals means her gut has to work more often - maybe never getting a rest?
i know how hard it is to cope with something that seems intermittent, you think you're on top of it and then it flares up again - it's both exhausting and demoralizing.
if you don't mind i would like to tell you my( almost random) thoughts about your situation- which has been on my mind a bit, and what i've done in the past. i think you are probably dealing with a food sensitivity. if your vet is happy that lilly's bloods are fine - ruling out PLE and pancreatitis and her poop also clear then i would be looking to it being a problem with her gut. Small intestine bacterial overgrowth is something to condsider as well - i suspect that is why your vet gave you Tylosin as i think that is the standard treatment .
I would recommend having a look at the website Nutriscan.org. This a place that you can use to carry out food sensitivity testing. I think that it is probably the best available tool at the moment for food related issues. It costs about £300 or so. I have used it twice for different dogs. i wouldn't hesitate to do it again. i feel that if this test had been available years ago i might have had a chance of saving one of our dogs who's gut was ultimately the cause of her demise.
I would be feeding a probiotic, the one i've used is Protexin synbiotic. These capsules have a high amount of both pre and pro biotics . i got them from hyperdrug.com where i get all my doggy supplements and supplies. i also feed Dorwest's Tree Barks Powder. You can phone them for advice-01308 897272 or e-mail them.
with food sensitivities the idea is to feed a novel protein source such as ostrich, venison, kangaroo etc. there are a number of companies out there i am using food from Trovet which i get from petfoodwarehouse.co.uk. i would if possible be feeding raw but sometimes this is not an option .some of the ready made raw products have an awful lot of ingredients in them which may make it more difficult for you to pin down what might be irritating to lilly.
the wet royal canin gastrointestinal does not only contain chicken and rice. it has meat and meat by products, fish and fish by products , veg and veg by products and cereals. this non specific list of ingredients makes it impossible to know what lilly is actually getting. the dry version is a bit better with a shorter list of more specific ingredients listed and might be worth a try.
you say lilly gets mince, if it is beef i think that beef may be one of the more troublesome proteins. i was wondering if the cold mince has less fat in it than the warm mince and may be the amount of fat affects whether she is ill or not.
i wondered if the treats that you feed would be different from the treats at the dog sitters and whether that might hold a clue
i feed my adult whippets two meals a day, i wondered if 3 meals means her gut has to work more often - maybe never getting a rest?
i know how hard it is to cope with something that seems intermittent, you think you're on top of it and then it flares up again - it's both exhausting and demoralizing.