Vet visit to treat RI cost?
Can anyone that has been to the vet to treat RI give me a rough estimate of the cost of a visit and treatment?
thanks,
Dave
Re: Vet visit to treat RI cost?
Just made an appointment for tomorrow. Thanks for the replies! My Pastel is making weird noises when I picked him up and he just shed, so I was thinking piece of skin in nasal. But now he keeps opening his mouth, so now I'm pretty sure its RI. :(
wish us luck,
Dave
Re: Vet visit to treat RI cost?
when dealing with resp you need to know the stages. once it gets bad enough where they start blowing bubbles and mucous its usually too late. best thing to do is get some batryl and keep it on hand just in case. if you start treating as soon as you notice it you can resolve it pretty easy. a vet is gonna charge alot either way so that is why its important to know if its gonna be treatable or its a loss cause. if you think its resp then get the animal on paper and put the heat to about 91. if it just shed this could be just a nasal thing from the shed. around here a vet visit with batryl will run about 350 bucks. the last time i had resp was when i got an animal in on a trade that came in with it. he was blowing bubbles and i hit him with batryl but i knew he was too far gone and he didnt make it.
Re: Vet visit to treat RI cost?
If it is indeed an RI, your vet will need to culture the infection to figure out what antibiotic will be most effective.
I get worried when I hear people saying "Baytril" over and over gain when discussing RIs. If your vet is doing nothing but prescribing Baytril without taking a culture, he is shooting in the dark. There are many bacterial strains that are resistant to Baytril.
That's why people come on here and complain that even after months of treatment, their animals lose the battle. You need to be prepared to spend the money to treat it right and your vet needs to take the time to identify the bacteria responsible. Is it gram negative? Gram positive? Which antibiotics is the bacteria susceptible to? That one little test makes sure that your animal will be treated quickly and effectively the first time and not have to endure months of injections and illness.
In the long run, spending the money to culture the infection could save you money. How many people have we seen post that were prescribed Baytril and it didn't work. Then they were prescribed amikacin - and it didn't work, and so on.
As for the visit, it varies from area to area, vet to vet.