Favorite team:LSU 
Location:San Antonio
Biography:
Interests:
Occupation:
Number of Posts:5
Registered on:5/31/2008
Online Status:Not Online

Recent Posts

Message
Bad credit. Hoping for a new Mini Cooper.
I know exactly what you mean. Constantly cleaning slobber off the walls. Good times.
The female was a bull mastiff and about 155 pounds, but she got sick when we had her at a dog kennel while on vacation so did not see the full process, The male was an english mastiff about 175 pounds, and the first time he was sick with bloat, we loaded him up immediately and headed to the emergency vet. They did the surgery immediately, and he was supposed to be isolated and resting for about three weeks once we got him home.

However we also have a two year old german shepherd who is so active, it was hard to keep him away from the playing shepherd. He did well for about 5-6 months and then had bloat again. We caught it in time and got him to the vet and they were able to treat him with meds and other procedures and he was able to recover.

We have a pool in the back yard and the dogs were out playing in the late evening. They had been out for only about an hour or so and my youngest daughter was coming off the sport court and saw that Rosco (the mastiff) was acting funny. We got him out of the pool and could see immediately that he was already in distress from bloat.

We could not get him in the truck and called the emergency vet who told us several things to try. None proved helpful, and within another hour or so he was gone. Really a very sad thing to watch him go through. But he was nine years old, and was pretty well at his age maximum for the breed.

Thanks for your thoughts, he was a great animal, amazing protector for my children and extremely loyal dog. But good Lord, could he fart and fill up a house with the worst smells you could imagine. Guess I will miss even those things!
I just lost one mastiff with this and the second one had it a few months later. Had the surgery at vet emergency hospital and stomach was stapled to body cavity. Twice more after surgery he came down with bloat again, and the second time killed him last Sunday. He was too sick to make it through a second surgery. We tried different bowls, different heights, different foods. It just seems some breeds are more susceptible to this problem than others and older mastiffs is one of those breeds.
Suffer no more my friend, you've earned your eternal rest.