Brittany_Lynn
I like dinosaurs :3
My mom bought my siblings and myself a pomeranian (Foxy) from a breeder about 5 years ago for Christmas, however she is bonded the closest with my mom, so personally I consider her my mom's dog. Anyway, Foxy is intact because she was a bred (had one litter), and my mom had thoughts of having 1 litter of puppies that (thankfully) never panned out, but my mom never got her spayed anyway.
About a year ago, I noticed that Foxy had some lumps around her nipples, and I looked up some info online, and self-diagnosed her as having mastitis. My mom took Foxy to the vet, and his diagnosis was as follows:
Foxy had a false pregnancy, and because she didn't actually have any puppies, the milk that her hormones sent out is building up, and she is trying to lactate, but she doesn't have nursing puppies, so you have to stimulate that yourself to get rid of the lumps of milk.
Very well, we did and everything worked out fairly well. A few months ago, I noticed that the lumps had returned; my mother repeated the vet's previous diagnosis, but when I tried stimulating her this time, no milk came out. I was worried, but my mom kept shrugging me off. Eventually, however, the lumps became rock-hard, AND I noticed one that was no where near her nipples-it was up by her rib cage. My mom kept shrugging it off and kept saying she didn't have money to take Foxy to the vet, so eventually I saved up and made an appointment for my mom to take her (with my money...).
The vet's current diagnosis is as follows:
It is either breast cancer, or calcified milk in her milk ducts. Our options are as follows:
1. Do 3 separate surgeries on Foxy to remove the lumps. We cannot do 1 surgery because she is too small and apparently she doesn't have enough skin for him to remove all the lumps and then sew her back up.
The vet did not suggest this because "she is a very small dog, they don't do as well in major surgery, and also because she is so old" (10 years old)
2. Take a culture of the multiple lumps to figure out whether it was cancerous (then benign or malignant) or calcified milk, and then figure out our next step.
The vet did not suggest this because "sometimes when you stick the tumor with a needle, the cancer will get upset and start growing, even if it had been benign before."
(...apparently we don't want to poke the cancer because it will get an attitude and will maliciously decide to start growing again?)
3. Wait and see if her lumps get bigger over time. (Approximately 2-3 months).
This is what the vet suggested.
...My mom is afraid that if Foxy has surgery that she'll never come out of it, so she didn't push for that, and she didn't like what the vet said about the cancer "deciding to get worse if we pricked it", so she was happy to bring Foxy home and "wait it out" but I am very unhappy with this prognosis.
Any thoughts? Any one have something similar happen with their dogs/cats/larger animals?
Below are some pictures of my dear.
About a year ago, I noticed that Foxy had some lumps around her nipples, and I looked up some info online, and self-diagnosed her as having mastitis. My mom took Foxy to the vet, and his diagnosis was as follows:
Foxy had a false pregnancy, and because she didn't actually have any puppies, the milk that her hormones sent out is building up, and she is trying to lactate, but she doesn't have nursing puppies, so you have to stimulate that yourself to get rid of the lumps of milk.
Very well, we did and everything worked out fairly well. A few months ago, I noticed that the lumps had returned; my mother repeated the vet's previous diagnosis, but when I tried stimulating her this time, no milk came out. I was worried, but my mom kept shrugging me off. Eventually, however, the lumps became rock-hard, AND I noticed one that was no where near her nipples-it was up by her rib cage. My mom kept shrugging it off and kept saying she didn't have money to take Foxy to the vet, so eventually I saved up and made an appointment for my mom to take her (with my money...).
The vet's current diagnosis is as follows:
It is either breast cancer, or calcified milk in her milk ducts. Our options are as follows:
1. Do 3 separate surgeries on Foxy to remove the lumps. We cannot do 1 surgery because she is too small and apparently she doesn't have enough skin for him to remove all the lumps and then sew her back up.
The vet did not suggest this because "she is a very small dog, they don't do as well in major surgery, and also because she is so old" (10 years old)
2. Take a culture of the multiple lumps to figure out whether it was cancerous (then benign or malignant) or calcified milk, and then figure out our next step.
The vet did not suggest this because "sometimes when you stick the tumor with a needle, the cancer will get upset and start growing, even if it had been benign before."
(...apparently we don't want to poke the cancer because it will get an attitude and will maliciously decide to start growing again?)
3. Wait and see if her lumps get bigger over time. (Approximately 2-3 months).
This is what the vet suggested.
...My mom is afraid that if Foxy has surgery that she'll never come out of it, so she didn't push for that, and she didn't like what the vet said about the cancer "deciding to get worse if we pricked it", so she was happy to bring Foxy home and "wait it out" but I am very unhappy with this prognosis.
Any thoughts? Any one have something similar happen with their dogs/cats/larger animals?
Below are some pictures of my dear.