We were wondering about that ourselves, but can’t find any evidence of that in either living form, in the yard, or in the digested form, also, um, in the yard. And he hasn’t been anywhere else except on car trips the past few days. And no, he hasn’t eaten anything in the cars (we checked).
The vet did ask about those, as it happens.
At any rate, if it were possible at the moment I’d switch vets in a heartbeat. But it’s not. This one is the only one in town that will accept payments – oh, some of the others will if you’re an established customer, but not for first-time ones – and we just don’t have the $$$ for treatment up-front. For my wife and son, they’ve got insurance; not so much on the doggy.
So while I’d love to switch (he’s rather far away), I’m reduced to operating on the assumption that the vet is capable, as evidenced by the rapid recovery after treatment, and was telling my wife a little white lie to make her feel better. He did mention seizures but said he’d bet on the spider-eating, especially since they’ve been so bad this year.
Of course, he could just be a moron who happened to stumble on the right treatment, but I’ve seen him work with animals (my MIL has a brood of Japanese Chins, plus a Siberian Husky and what I can only describe as a mop without a handle), literally for generations, and he DOES seem to know his stuff.
Because dammit, seizures are the next most likely cause, and this breed (Long-Haired Chihuahua) is known for them.
I didn’t know this before today, but I’ve been doing some checking. Other vets in the area have pooh-pooh’d the “ate a spider” theory, so we’re looking at either ingestion of some fast-acting, relatively non-toxic poison, or a seizure.
God I hope it’s not seizures. We really love this dog.
Side note:
This may be the single most truthful statement ever penned on Wikipedia. 