Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Our Dachshunds, Our Heroes
Meet our latest Dachshund Hero, 12-year-old red smooth 'Buster,' who hails from Grovetown, Georgia. When his human, Lelia Boatright, went into insulin shock at 3 in the morning, Buster let the whole house know and saved her life! Excerpt from the Columbia County News-Times:
“He started howling, that’s what woke me up,” said Les Boatright, of Grovetown. “The dog let us know that something was wrong.”
At about 3 a.m., Buster alerted Boatright that his wife, Lelia, was having a medical crisis. Lelia Boatright, who has been an insulin-dependent diabetic for more than 35 years, was in insulin shock.
Her blood sugar dropped so low that she lost consciousness and nearly died.
“The dog started causing a ruckus,” said Les Boatright, who sleeps in another room because of a ruptured disc in his back. “I went in there to check on what was wrong with the dog. That’s when I found her like that. I thought she was dead.”
He said the mattress was soaked in sweat, and his wife’s eyes had rolled back in her head. She had only a weak pulse and shallow breathing.
Lelia Boatright said she has a glucose monitoring system implanted under her skin that works with an insulin pump.
When her glucose monitor detects that her blood sugar is high or low, it sends a message to the pump, which signals Lelia Boatright. She then has to hit a button to dispense the medication that keeps her blood sugar from skyrocketing.
The last thing she remembers is having dinner and checking her blood sugar – and everything was fine.
She took what she believed was her typical insulin dose and went to bed.
“I just, somehow, hit the wrong button and gave myself 10 units (of insulin) instead of the one or two that I usually take to get (my blood sugar) down,” Lelia Boatright said. “It was the maximum amount my pump is set for.”
She said she woke up in the ambulance, dazed and confused, but was eventually able to answer the medical personnel’s questions. She never realized what went wrong until she was in the hospital and checked the history on her insulin pump.
If Buster hadn’t alerted Les Boatright, his wife likely would have died by morning.
The Boatrights actually gave Buster to their son, Joseph, on his 8th birthday. The now-20-year-old is finishing his first year away at college, so Buster has taken to sleeping with Lelia Boatright.
“God has a plan for everything,” she said. “And it just wasn’t my time yet.”
We're so proud of you Buster! Read more of this story at the Columbia County News-Times.
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3 comments:
dachshunds are the BEST!
A Dachshund raising a ruckus? Really? Let us ponder the possibilities ...HA! I can't even write sarcasm when it comes to the brilliance of these fantastic, scary-smart, off-the-charts wonder hounds and how they add to our lives and on some days actually save them. Amazing. Simply amazing. No one had to teach, or train this family friend to do what was right when an emergency came up - "My owner needs help, I will sound the alarm." We've often said every child when they come into the world should be assigned a care giver as a loyal as a dachshund - think of what a healthy place we'd live in. :)
What a little hero! Dog rock but especially Doxies :)
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