I have a Golden Retriever that started acting very lethargic at about 22 months old. At this time, I was unknowingly giving him a high protein diet. After some time and a few trips to the vet, they did blood work then a bile acid test and said he most likely had a liver shunt. He also has other symptoms of a liver shunt, he's smaller than all his siblings, and he rubs his head on the walls. We put him on a low protein diet with lactulose, amoxicillin and metronidazole. He started acting more perky almost immediately. He's still a little lethargic, but probably 80% of his former self.
We don't have pet insurance so cost of procedures is a decision making factor. After lots of reading on this forum, we decided against an ultrasound per Shalva's comments that it won't tell us where the shunt is located. We got a price for a CT scan to determine if there's a shunt, $1,150. Information I've seen says 85% of the shunts in large dogs are intrahepatic. The cost for correcting an intrahepatic shunt at UC Davis (in our state) is over $10K, so we wouldn't get that surgery performed. We're leaning toward just treating him with diet and meds and not getting a CT scan since we don't think it would change how we would treat the condition..
Does anyone have experience treating their Golden with a liver shunt with only diet and meds? How long did they live after being diagnosed with a shunt? Has anyone had a shunt diagnosed this late in the dog's life, and what was their outcome?
We don't have pet insurance so cost of procedures is a decision making factor. After lots of reading on this forum, we decided against an ultrasound per Shalva's comments that it won't tell us where the shunt is located. We got a price for a CT scan to determine if there's a shunt, $1,150. Information I've seen says 85% of the shunts in large dogs are intrahepatic. The cost for correcting an intrahepatic shunt at UC Davis (in our state) is over $10K, so we wouldn't get that surgery performed. We're leaning toward just treating him with diet and meds and not getting a CT scan since we don't think it would change how we would treat the condition..
Does anyone have experience treating their Golden with a liver shunt with only diet and meds? How long did they live after being diagnosed with a shunt? Has anyone had a shunt diagnosed this late in the dog's life, and what was their outcome?