I am one
of those people who rarely gets sick - much beyond a cold, a cough and
the traditional annual week in bed with 'man flu' just after Christmas
to catch up on my reading.
The dog is ill though - he has leishmaniasis. This nasty disease is a parasitic infection that comes from the no-see-ums
that fly around in clouds over stagnant water (there's an obliging pool
in our nearby dry river bed). These midges bite on the ankles in
humans, without causing much more damage than a passing itch, but they
appear to be mortal for most dogs in my barrio (not all, my last hound managed to bark at the neighbours for twenty two years before death took her).
My dog has the disease, and a vet recently discovered a medicine that
keeps the infection in check - it's a pill that humans take against gout
called Alopurinol. He's managed over a year now on one of these pills crushed daily into his doggybix and seems to be doing well on the diet.
Gout is a nasty little complaint. It's like a tiny piece of gravel
behind the bone in one of your extremities. I looked it up on the
Internet after my toe turned red, started to hurt and swelled up. Too
much brandy apparently. I was limping around shouting blue buggery,
taking a whack at any child or animal that came to close to me and
wondering whether to go and see the doctor. But then, I thought, what
about the dog's daily dose!
So, here we are. The dog and me are sharing the same box of tablets. One for you my dear and one for me.
Ahh, that's better.