
I'm hoping that by sharing our story that other leos can be saved and it might give an explanation to a behavior sometimes seen with our bergers.
At 10pm on Saturday night, our nightmare began. The dogs were in their bedroom and we were getting ready to go to bed when I could hear gagging and wretching coming from their room. I ignored it for a minute thinking that it would pass, but it didn't. I could then hear panting coming from the room too. I went to see what was happening. It was Astrid. She'd had these episodes a few times before and it involves air gulping, panting and a desperate need to eat. I'd always put it down to a bit of reflux as she had a few episodes whilst in whelp, she also gets them when she's moulting. normally it is all over and done with very quickly, particularly if she has something to eat. Not this time. Even after having half a chicken carcass she continued to gag, pant and gradually looked more and more frantic. Oh shit. Was it bloat? Although her abdomen wasn't swelling, the gagging, wretching and panting are the signs we are supposed to look for, aren't they? The visible bloat happens when just before the torsion?
We left for the vets and Astrid was examined straight away. There wasn't an obvious bloat yet upon palpation, but she's a big girl and the stomach could swell a considerable size before feeling or seeing could be seen. Giving her presentation, the vet xrayed her. She wasn't at immediate risk and so the vet monitored her over night. In the morning she re-xrayed her again and found her stomach had increased in size. It was now becoming an emergency. They prepared her for surgery and rang me to say they were taking her in.
A few hours later I received the call. Astrid was being woken up. When they opened her up, they were greeted by a giant fur ball. A fur ball the size of a rabbit! What they were seeing on the xray was the stomach using its defence by filling her up with acid to combat the fur ball. Luckily (or not) it wasn't actually bloat she was experiencing but an obstruction in her stomach. The vet has never removed a fur ball from a dog before despite practicing for years.
Astrid is set to make a full recovery and came home today. She bounded over to me dragging a veterinary nurse when i went to fetch her, but it could have been a very different story.
I have heard that there are numerous leos out there with similar episodes to what Astrid periodically had (panting, gagging, wretching, a need to eat, pacing, telling you that they NEED to go out).
She is raw Fed so has tummy acids capable of dealing with bone, however hair does not digest in the strongest of stomach acids! I am still researching what can be done to avoid this happening again. Although the vet does not feel there is any reason why it should happen again - Astrid is not an avid groomer, neither does she eat hair. This is just something that has built up over time from general, average grooming, eating things off the floor etc etc. She has however had a major molt after the puppies which has meant loads of loose hair floating about/being swallowed, which could have contributed to the things coming to a head now.
Please please, if your Leo has had similar symptoms that only last 5 minutes, get your Leo checked. It could be “harmless” heartburn or tummy ache (some reasons listed by vets for this behavior) but it could be something more sinister like Astrid’s furball that was quietly growing in her tummy over time, only symptoms it gave were the odd episode like described above and it could have killed her!