Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello - and I'm so sorry to hear that you lost your dog. The stages of grief do involve playing events back in your head and even torturing yourself with them; 'bargaining' that 'if only I had done things differently it would all be different,' or looking for sticks to beat yourself with. Please be aware that your mind can be extremely cruel at times like these - procrastinating by telling ourselves horrid stories can prevent us from actually having to face the loss - so paradoxically, it can all be down to your brain trying to protect itself.
I'm not sure what the orange stuff was or where it had come from in this instance, but I assume from the context that it was jaundiced urine (your vet will comment on that). Jaundice can occur when the liver is overloaded e.g. in liver failure, or with internal bleeding, where too many red blood cells are getting broken down to be fully processed by the liver. Internal bleeding would fit with white gums. Causes of red cell breakdown then, include trauma, cancer, autoimmune disease (e.g. haemolytic anaemia - sometimes associated with collies), heartworm, toxic plants and Babesia (which is more prevalent in some parts of the world than others, specifically the Northeast and Upper Midwest America, especially in coastal area). To answer your questions about heartworm, it is rare in dogs under a year old because of the time it takes the parasite to spread in the body and mature. You tell me that there has only been a five month lapse in treatment. Now, I know nothing about the type of treatment that you were giving or what life-cycle stage it was targeting. But it sounds likely that there may have been too small a gap there. However, please do check with your vet.
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