Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello - this sounds like a very sad and frustrating case for everyone. For vets, nurses and lab techs, there are a lot of peer support case resources that might be a better source to consult for this question, as this resource is actually specific to owners and you were obviously the professionals in the case. There are many vet professionals-only Facebook discussion groups, for example, and once registered with your membership number, you can even post on them anonymously. Ideally point out what you do so that some specialist doesnt come along and blind you with specialist-level-science-speak, but they will have more scope (and more vet brains) to talk through this. I think that the conclusion may be that more information may be needed - but you might be able to find the information out, especially if you team up with the vet. For example, but you don't say anything about the type of anaemia, whether this could have been an error of the blood machine (was it double-checked with a slide, whether all the red blood cells were the same size or different, did any still have nuclei, etc) Usually this would help to work out whether the anaemia was regenerative or non regenerative, which mahelp to pinpoint its possible origins. Your vet will hopefully know this, or have tried to find out and certainly will have information that provides clues. With pancreatitis, CPLi and ultrasound would usually give a reasonable indication, used
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