Kelly & Logan
Very Active Member
Jess & Earl said:Kelly, I'm sorry to hear that Logan is doing so poorly. I don't know any of the backstory here so forgive me if I'm off the mark at times.
It sounds like they've told you he has a septic abdomen, or "septic peritonitis"? Does that sound right? And they don't know why? Is this a specialty/referral center type of ER? Did anyone do an ultrasound? I am not sure why, if they think he's septic (I assume they diagnosed this by withdrawing some fluid from his abdomen and looking at it), they didn't tell you he needs surgery right away? So I guess I"m a little confused as to the exact diagnosis.
Assuming that he's got septic peritonitis, and your option is surgery, I am strongly in favor of surgery asap. To be blunt, if that's the case, there is no hope without surgery. I would personally rather give my own animal a chance to live (knowing that means the possibility of death in the OR) than watch them fight a battle they are 100% certain to lose. The chances of survival even with surgery aren't the best, though many animals do make it. The chances without surgery are nil. The big unknown here is why? What happened to let loose bacteria into the abdomen? If it is something very serious, for example the intestines have opened up in one spot due to a cancer, then the surgeon can call you, tell you what she/he has found, and let you decide whether or not to go on. The patient can be let go without ever having to wake up. If it's not as serious, the abdomen can be washed out thoroughly and the patient then has at least a fighting chance of making it.
Please let me know what exactly they said was the diagnosis, if there is any fluid in the abdomen, etc.
Jess, Logan had exploratory surgery about a month ago to determine if he had IBD or cancer. He has IBD. They placed a PEG tube in during surgery b/c he had stopped eating. The tube is the source of the infection. They did an ultra sound. There doesn't appear to be fluid in the abdomen. The infection is in the abdominal wall. We were deciding between doing surgery or putting him to sleep. We know he doesn't have a chance w/o the surgery. We took him to the ER yesterday. They transferred him to the internist on call today and she did the ultra sound. The on call surgeon was at a different location. Surgery is scheduled for tomorrow. The infection is in the subcutaneous layer - in the fatty tissue. They've told us that fatty tissue doesn't get a lot of blood supply so it's difficult to get it to respond to ABs - that's why they have to try to get as much out during surgery. Even with surgery, the odds are against him it seems.