
It turns out that discoloration of the nose is an early sign of
Lupus. Who knew? As Murphy had gotten older, his pink skin had begun to darken, specifically on his belly. Between aging and his lively lifestyle, we didn't think much of it. In fact, we barely noticed it.
Then one day we looked and the discoloration had spread across his nose and crusted over. Of course, we took him to the vet right away. But, as it seems frequently happens, he was misdiagnosed. The doctor didn't know what it was, and sent him home with an antibiotic shot.
After a week, it didn't improve, so we took him back to the same doctor. She gave us anti-fungal cream to put on his nose. That didn't improve things, so we took him to a different doctor. At first they thought it was Pemphigus. But, the more they searched thru medical texts (yes, they dug the books out for this one!), we realized that he had all the symptoms of
Lupus.
To know definitively, they would have to biopsy, which meant general anesthesia. For the last year, Murphy has been on a low-protein diet because he's in the early stages of
renal failure (kidneys). The anesthesia would be hard on his kidneys, so we opted to pass on the test, but treat the disease.