Chi-Spaniel...A mix between a Cocker Spaniel and a Chihuahua

This unique breed makes an amazing pet. Since I've found very little information on this breed, I thought I'd organize what I know and chronicle my dog's life to help other pet owners.
NOTE: I'm willing to re-home chi-spaniels! I live in the Pittsburgh area. Feel free to email me at: chispaniel@live.com

Thursday, January 30, 2014

2 Year Annual Vet Check-Up

Nyota recently visited the vet for her annual check-up.  (Sorry, I’m late to blog about it…life got in the way.)  The animal hospital that I take her to tries to keep pets seeing the same doctor throughout their lifetimes.

Nyota was placed on the baby scale and I learned she now weighs 13.9 pounds.  I suspect she will hover at this weight for many years to come. The doctor did the usual things, and Nyota wasn’t very cooperative. She kept scrambling for me to hold her, but in any unfamiliar situation, that’s what she does.

The doctor said she’s in great health and was patient with my insanely obsessive pet questions:

What’s this bump on her head?

Her skull.

She doesn’t have a brain tumor?

No.

Is this tooth decay?

No, it’s a stain.

Why does she shake her ears? Could she have ear mites?

No, she doesn’t have ear mites. She has floppy ears; she’s bound to shake them.

She scratches, but I can’t find any fleas (and she regularly receives flea treatment). 

Why?

She might be allergic to flea spit. If it becomes excessive, bring her back.

Is it safe for her to get all of her shots at once?

Yes.

Are you sure?

Yes.  We can give them at two different times if you’d like.

No, I believe you.

Nyota received her shots and was adored by the crowd in the waiting room when we were leaving. The secretary at the desk said that she owned a Cocker Spaniel and most bite, so she was afraid to pet Nyota, but Nyota didn’t bite her (thankfully).  I’m beginning to think that everyone has their own version of what breeds ‘normally’ do.


Since Nyota was fully up-to-date with her vet care and healthy, I applied for doggy health insurance for her. I had been comparing policies and benefits with different companies for a few weeks. I decided to go with Healthy Paws Pet Insurance. (You can follow that link.) I answered a few basic questions and entered my info/ credit card payment and it was that easy! 

I chose the highest level of insurance that I could because I’m a worrier when it comes to Nyota. I never want to sacrifice her health care if I’m in a financial bind. She’s already had one surgery in her life to correct a cherry eye (common with Cocker Spaniels), I had to call doggy poison control ($60 for a 1 minute phone call), and take her to be seen for her bug bite. So, for 90% coverage of all costs and only a $100 deductible, my payment is $34.56 per month. Please note—I could have gone with a lesser level of coverage and have a smaller payment a month. Really, it’s a very good idea to get your dog health insurance. When I watched the documentary, Madonna of the Mills, I learned some people had paid over ten thousand dollars to correct their dog’s health problems.  You never know what will happen! 




Insect Bite on My Dog

I never leave Nyota alone. She has very bad separation anxiety, even when I leave her with a pet sitter.  Besides that, I’m also concerned with leaving her alone in a house…what if a fire broke out? Is it fair to leave my dogs locked in a house where they would die? No…so, they go to the pet sitter, even if I’m just going to the grocery store. (Yes, I’m paranoid.)

A week after Nyota’s annual check-up, I returned to the pet sitter’s to find that her mouth was swollen. No one had seen her digest or be bitten by anything. I frantically called the vet. I wasn’t very calm, to be honest.  They instructed me to administer her some Benedryl and monitor her.

The Benedryl did reduce the swelling.  Later that night, she vomited three times. I contacted the vet again and they agreed to see her. This isn’t the first time I’ve taken a dog to the vet for a bug bite. My other dog still has a scar from where ‘something’ bit her. (The vet thought it was a spider.)

There was no visible bite on Nyota. She seemed to be swallowing both food and water okay.  They rectally took her temperature and after that, her visit didn’t go well. She was so irritated from having the thermometer shoved up her bum that she didn’t want examined any more. They actually had to take her from me to another room to administer her shots. They gave her IM Benedryl, a Steroid, and two shots for nausea. I was instructed to take her food away for the rest of the night and only offer her boiled chicken/ hamburg mixed with white rice.

We went home and had a diarrhea filled weekend. Thankfully I still had a pack of pee pads on hand from when she was a puppy, because she literally ran to them and had diarrhea every 30 minutes for most of the next 24 hours. I kept her on the boiled meat/ white rice diet for two days, and she was exceptionally sleepy/ not herself. The bite occurred on a Friday, and by Monday, she was nearly herself again.

I still have no idea what bit Nyota. She was indoors when it happened, but any insect can find its way into any home, at any time, so the possibilities are endless.


From this experiment, I learned I needed to always keep a few things on hand, such as Benedryl (make sure it doesn’t expire!), pee pads, and a syringe to administer liquid medications since my dog won’t easily swallow pills.