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    Sweetwater Kennels

    5.0 (3 reviews)
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    Ask the Community - Sweetwater Kennels

    UF Small Animal Hospital - Thank you Dr. Narum!

    UF Small Animal Hospital

    (128 reviews)

    Update on Cooper's death. The University of Florida Small Animal Hospital staff assigned to Cooper,…read more20 Team Members including 3 Board Certified DVMs, pulled 8 vials of fentanyl and 1 vial of dexmedetomidine, creating the deadly cocktail known as "tranq." The amount of fentanyl and dex injected into Cooper by UF is enough to kill a pack of wolves. UF's purpose? Clinically "test" reversing agents' naloxone (aka narcan), atipamezole, vasopressin, terbutaline. Most likely, UF's patent experimental drug "Compound 368" discovered, in part, by UF Professor Jay McLaughlin, could have been used as part of the unapproved reversing agent experiment. UF Board of Trustees and their legal department continue to hold the release of medical records and defy the laws, both state and federal. UF made a precalculated decision to divert treating Cooper kidneys (treatable and in 5 days he would have come home) to experimental research on Tranq and its reversing agents. What makes a powerful institution like UF that has been around for 97 years succumb to illegal activities as this? If anyone has experienced a sudden and unexpected death of your pet while under the University of Florida medical care, with any form of kidney or liver disease, beware. These two organs are what triggers UF internal administration's interest as either one is prime for experimentation on reversing agents. Narcan (naloxone) reverses the fentanyl. Atipamezole reverses the dex (dexmedetomidine. Compound 368 under research, attaches to the narcan in the brain cells trying to reverse the fentanyl overdose. What is most disturbing in this reality, is the fact the University of Florida Veterinary Hospital in business to "treat" animals, decided to use Cooper as an experiment with a known deadly outcome! Pumping 8 vials of fentanyl and a vial of dex into Cooper immediately overdosed our boy. Shutting down his organs and sucked the oxygen from his blood and brain. Horrifically destroying his healthy body and finished off his damaged (but treatable) kidneys. Then began covering up their clinical experiment with fraudulent medical records drafted after death. Destruction of evidence (blood drawn). Withholding medical and research records from release to Cooper's family. Word of advice to every pet owner, I would stay clear from the University of Florida Animal Hospital.

    I had a deeply disturbing experience with Dr. Tassala Djennadi…read more I came in asking for a sterile needle to administer subcutaneous fluids to my cat, who has late-stage kidney disease and requires daily care to stay alive. Because I had been out of town, he had already gone over 48 hours without fluids. This is not optional care..it is essential. Without asking a single follow-up question about his condition or how long he had gone without treatment, she told me she couldn't provide a needle and that he could "wait another day." When I explained that he had already missed over two days of fluids and that I was concerned, she told me that if it were a "real emergency," I would have planned better. Let that sink in: a veterinarian told me that my cat missing multiple days of medically necessary fluids was not an emergency because of my "planning." There was zero compassion, no attempt to help, no alternatives offered, and no concern for the animal. I was standing there holding his prescribed subcutaneous fluid bag with his name and information clearly labeled and even offered to provide his SOAP note, yet instead of helping, she, in an obviously mockiny and unhelpful way, suggested I could always spend $200 for needles if I were to bring my cat in for a full exam just to be entered into their system before they would sell me needles, fully aware that this wasn't possible that night. I told her plainly that my only options were to go home and attempt to reuse an old needle or have her help my cat who urgently needed fluids, and she still refused. I was ultimately turned away and left in the unacceptable position of having to consider reusing an old needle just to care for my cat.

    Sweetwater Kennels - petbreeders - Updated June 2026

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