- Joined
- Nov 15, 2021
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- 78
This is an elaborated version of a misplaced post from last week that only was seen by Dr. Jeff and Dr. Christina. (Thank you for your responses).
Fibi is a Havanese, 9 lb, female 14 3/4 yrs young. She gets acupuncture and laser on average once a month and responds well.
She eats part venison and part Bramble with every meal and additional supplements.
We've been splitting her dinner into two parts now: 1/2 at 7pm and 1/2 at midnight. When she wakes us up, at 3ish am (senility?) she's whimpering a lot, we are giving her 1/2 of her breakfast and the other half around 5am when she awakes again. She sleeps after being fed. She not crying to relieve herself.
She's on thyroid med and adrenal desiccated from Standard Process, Gabapentin, Lifewave X39 stem cell patches & CBD.
Her Beam is-
Behavior- Obsessed w/ food/treats but not interested in playing w/ toys or us much anymore.
Energy- Has a lot of energy around snuffle tasks and food. Otherwise, she sleeps a lot. We have not been able to walk her much due to cold weather. Though she gets up many times per day to see if there's food on her mat.
Appetite- Excellent! + Treat-centric!
Mood- Did I mention food makes her happy...? Engaged only when food is around or if she's just eaten she like to get massages. She has slowed down quite bit.
We will be trying Homeopathic Ignatia 30c shortly.
Fibi starts crying in the wee hours. We thought she was in pain so vet gave her Gabapentin bf bedtime but that has not helped with these early wake ups. She is relentless about us feeding her every morning at 4-4:30am! She usually eats around 6:30am or so.
We feed her dinner at around 7pm.
Is it possible she has low blood sugar? Her vet says that she's not hypoglycemic based on recent labs but really hasn't been checked at 4am. Not likely to be either. Or is it senility that's waking her?
We are sleep deprived as a result of her recent activity...
LAST RESORT: Does anyone have a suggestion for a gentle sedative that we can give her in order for us all to get some sleep around here? An animal communicator suggested possibly adding a very small dose of trazadone.
Thanks for any insight.
Sheri & David
Fibi is a Havanese, 9 lb, female 14 3/4 yrs young. She gets acupuncture and laser on average once a month and responds well.
She eats part venison and part Bramble with every meal and additional supplements.
We've been splitting her dinner into two parts now: 1/2 at 7pm and 1/2 at midnight. When she wakes us up, at 3ish am (senility?) she's whimpering a lot, we are giving her 1/2 of her breakfast and the other half around 5am when she awakes again. She sleeps after being fed. She not crying to relieve herself.
She's on thyroid med and adrenal desiccated from Standard Process, Gabapentin, Lifewave X39 stem cell patches & CBD.
Her Beam is-
Behavior- Obsessed w/ food/treats but not interested in playing w/ toys or us much anymore.
Energy- Has a lot of energy around snuffle tasks and food. Otherwise, she sleeps a lot. We have not been able to walk her much due to cold weather. Though she gets up many times per day to see if there's food on her mat.
Appetite- Excellent! + Treat-centric!
Mood- Did I mention food makes her happy...? Engaged only when food is around or if she's just eaten she like to get massages. She has slowed down quite bit.
We will be trying Homeopathic Ignatia 30c shortly.
Fibi starts crying in the wee hours. We thought she was in pain so vet gave her Gabapentin bf bedtime but that has not helped with these early wake ups. She is relentless about us feeding her every morning at 4-4:30am! She usually eats around 6:30am or so.
We feed her dinner at around 7pm.
Is it possible she has low blood sugar? Her vet says that she's not hypoglycemic based on recent labs but really hasn't been checked at 4am. Not likely to be either. Or is it senility that's waking her?
We are sleep deprived as a result of her recent activity...
LAST RESORT: Does anyone have a suggestion for a gentle sedative that we can give her in order for us all to get some sleep around here? An animal communicator suggested possibly adding a very small dose of trazadone.
Thanks for any insight.
Sheri & David