Friday, February 4, 2011

324. Megaoesophagus case study report -

Chinese New Year. Feb 4, 2011.

The owner of the 8-year-old, spayed, female skin-and-bone dog phoned me to invite me to dinner of the 2nd day of Chinese New Year, tomorrow Feb 5, 2011.

"How's the poodle?" I asked. Yesterday, the wife was quite pleased that the dog did not vomit for the past 24 hours when I phoned for a feedback. I had hospitalised the emaciated dog that had refused to eat the reduced home-cooked food offered from Jan 28, 2011 to Jan 31, 2011.

"The poodle is OK," he asked his wife about the vomiting episodes while keeping me on hold. "She is playing with the Silkie in the balcony." This is where plants and grass are present, being a ground floor apartment.

"I had instructed your wife that the poodle should be separated from the Silkie (who bullies her) and not be near the plants (the poodle has a depraved appetite and would eat grass and soil, impacting the stomach and intestines).

"Don't worry," he said. "I am watching them."

"You monitor them every second?" I was incredulous. "You don't read your newspapers and do other things? All the poodle needed was access to the plants, branches and grass and take some mouthfuls and get constipation."

It was fortuitous that he had phoned me to let me know the time of dinner for tomorrow. I had expected his wife and him to be more careful and comply with the vet instructions.

The dog was emaciated and was going to die (of malnutrition) before Chinese New Year as she had lost appetite and was the thinnest dog in Singapore I had ever seen. I refer to dogs that had been well loved and cared for.

That was why the owners decided to consult me. The husband believed in giving the dog asparagus and multi-vitamins for the past 3 years but had not sought a second veterinary opinion since the first vet diagnosed stomach tumour some 3 years ago and had declared to me: "The vet predicted that this dog would not live more than 3 months and see..see...now, it is 3 years and she is still alive!" He was quite proud as he does his treatment with asparagus and multivitamins being his main methods much to the disappointment of his wife.

This foreseeing of the future continues to haunt vets who forecasted death as it is 3 years now and the emaciated poodle is still alive. "She will die before Chinese New Year," I said when I saw the dog with her pale gums on Jan 28, 2011 (6 days before CNY). Apparently his asparagus and multi-vitamin therapy and home-cooked food in small amounts must have failed after so many years.

"Unless your dog responds to the IV protein and dextrose multivitamin drips and treatment, she will not survive past the Chinese New Year." I showed the owners the pale gums. Other than pus in the eyes (a sign of poor health), the dog was looking normal if you consider a skin-and-bone dog that can stand up and walk a bit as being normal. She was still alive due to the perseverance of the wife feeding her small amounts of cereal and home-cooked food a few times a day. It was not a nice thing to say. There are other kinder ways of giving bad news, by beating around the bush. Unfortunately, owners do mis-construe and from experience, I have become frank and brutally honest about the prognosis.

As for the husband, he was introduced to me as he was in the veterinary field and so he did not object much. However he said: "Your student is not well trained by you," referring to the first vet who diagnosed stomach tumour. I had told him that this vet had interned with me some 20 years ago before she went to study "pre-vet course" in Malaysia and got admitted to am Australian Vet School. I am quite inspired by her perseverance as she did not complete her A levels and studies night classes for the A levels. Most vets get their A levels normally and go to study vet course. As a result of this remark by the husband, I should keep quiet about knowledge of my past interns in future!

Dr Vanessa got the owners to sign a hospitalisation consent form as we work as a team on this case and she was a hands-on vet. "She would be given anti-vomiting medication to prevent vomiting," she said in response to the complaint that the dog had been vomiting.

" Well, it is not as simple as that," I discussed the history of the case with her as this was the first time she saw this dog. I had visited the home of this dog and knew a bit about her life-style.

"I don't think anti-vomiting medication will work in the long term," I discussed with Dr Vanessa the history of this case. "This poodle had been 'vomiting' 1-2 hours after food per day for the past 3 years after a vet had diagnosed stomach tumour and advised against feeding dry dog food 3 years ago. She was not seen by another vet or reviewed again."

We hospitalised the dog, took blood samples, X-rays, gave the IV drips, antibiotics and Vit K1. My assistant gave her an enema and several hard stool lumps I had palpated in the abdomen passed out. No abdominal pain at all in this dog during palpation. The kidneys, liver and spleen could not be palpated. Some gas in the intestines. That was all in a shrunken abdomen with no fat.
Hospitalisation was important to observe the timing of the dog vomiting. Was vomiting just after eating and drinking or later? In this case, it does happen after and later!

However the dog did not vomit when given canned food in small amounts. The dog did vomit some hours after eating dry food I instructed to be given. She had an excellent appetite and would drink water as much as given. I deduced that the dog regurgitated rather than vomited due to retention of food in the distal oesophagus. There is a condition called megaoesophagus in dogs.

The dog is likely to suffer from megaesophagus. Earlier, I palpated her painful throat. She objected strongly, tilted her head and suddenly, around 50 ml of liquid just "spilled out of her throat." This was one sign of megaoesophagus.

My assistant Mr Saw quickly took a piece of towel to wipe off the liquid.
So this was not a vomiting case but a regurgitation case.

Other than megaoesphagus, this dog could be suffering from myasthenia gravis. The first symptom of this immune mediated disease in the older dog is due to megaoesphagus. Myasthenia occurs when nicotinic acetylcholine receptors malfunction. This leads to the muscles not contracting. The scenario would be as follows: the distal end of the oesophagus - oesophageal sphincter - not contracting and thereby accumulating food and water without being pushed them into the stomach, intestines not pushing stools out causing- constipation.

The owner's wife complained that the dog had been having constipation and passes rock-hard stools for a long time. This constipation would be due to this neuromuscular disease which is said to be an immune-mediated disease.

Yet if vets see the superficial view, this emaciated poodle was vomiting, not regurgitating based on the owner's complaint of vomiting. So, it was possible that the first vet diagnosed stomach tumour/dog food allergy, as claimed by the owner. Sometimes, the owner might have misconstrued the veterinarian's diagnosis as this was some 3 years ago.

Persistent vomiting in a dog needs reviews but the owners did not do so. Nor did they get a second opinion. It is usually a matter of economics.

"The dog could be suffering from megaoesophagus," I said to Dr Vanessa and my assistant Mr Saw who is a Myanmar vet graduate. I asked Mr Saw: "Have you heard of megaoesophagus?" Mr Saw shook his head. "This is an uncommon disease. This poodle could have acquired megaoesophagus at the age of 5 years. Now she is 8 years old."

Small animal veterinary medical cases are usually routine as in many professions. There are the usual common cases of skin problems and vomiting due to gastroenteritis. And we could get fooled by a rare case of regurgitation.

In megaoesophagus, the dog "vomits 1-2 hours" after eating. This is not vomiting but regurgitation. To the owner, it is vomiting and in many cases of foreign bodies or tumours in the distal oesophagus or stomach, it would be vomiting soon after eating.

Such cases needed more time in history taking and a house visit. The dog also ate sticks, grass and plants. So, it was possible that it had a piece of stick or branch had damaged proximal oesophagus such that it became dilated and trapped the small amounts of home-cooked food and water that the owner gave in the past 3 years (leading to emaciation). This condition could be existing at the same time as the acquired megaoesphagus.

I had 4 X-rays taken of the neck and the abdomen. "It should not be just one lateral view," I said to Dr Vanessa as we normally do that to lower veterinary costs for the owners. Was there a stomach tumour? It was possible. I had not thought of taking a chest X-ray to check aspiration pneumonia as the dog had no breathing difficulty and I had not diagnosed megaoesophagus definitely at the time of admission. I had a feeling that it could be megaoesophagus but the husband's complaint of expensive vets (vets making a lot of money, he always said to me) kept restraining me from doing the chest X-rays for this first consultation. It ought to have been done in retrospective review. I had told the owner the costs would be more than $500 and there was no guarantee that there was a cure. Yet, without the tests, the husband would save money and assumed it was stomach tumour. The dog would pass away soon and he would save money. Money was a hard fact of life and sometimes, the unwillingness of the owner to spend money affected the dog's diagnosis and treatment.

Back to the patient, I reviewed the X-rays. The poodle's abdomen was impacted with hard stools due to the lack of contraction of the muscle involving peristalsis (oesophageal sphincter and large intestines). The normal stools passed out after an enema and 3 days of hospitalisation and being fed canned food.

This "constipation" seem to support a diagnosis of megaoesphagus with myasthenia gravis. There could be an oesophageal carcinoma as a consequence of megaoesphagus.

An X-ray of the distal oesophagus with barium meal was not done. Or X-rays of the chest. The husband was frugal and so I had to be understanding. Not that he could not afford the veterinary fees but he had been cursing my mentor (another vet) regarding veterinary fees and had preferred self-treatment of his sick dogs. Times are hard and I can understand the need to be thrifty.

This case is tentatively diagnosed as megaoesophagus or megaesopohagus (in U.S spelling). The last two days had been "vomit-free" days and the wife was much relieved and happy. The dog would put on weight and if not much damage had been done to the heart or kidneys, this dog should live longer. Blood tests showed low red cells and haemoglobin. There was an unusually low level of serum urea and creatinine. This case needed further investigation for oesophageal tumours.

X-ray also revealed a dilated proximal oesphageal region. It was possible that there was a foreign body (stick or tree branch) stuck on the dorsal part of the proximal oesophagus, causing pain over the years and granulomatous tissues. Over the past 3 years of inflammation, the partially obstructed proximal oesophagus dilates to form a sac as seen by an opaque area in the cranial area of the oesopohagus distal to the epiglottis. Can you see it?

The dog is skin and bones now. If she is suffering from myasthenia gravis, anti-cholinesterase drugs will reverse the overall muscle weakness and there will be no "vomiting" and "constipation".






Veterinary medicine throws out a challenging case now and then. Red herrings like "vomiting" when they are actually "regurgitation." It is enough to make any vet go crazy. For the last 2 days, there was no regurgitation and the dog had regained pinkness in the gums and should put on weight. The wife would weigh herself and the dog and keep records of feeding. Usually it is the wife who is the care-giver and if she does comply with veterinary instructions (restricted prescription dog food canned mainly with a 3 pieces of pelleted food in small amounts and 30 ml of water each time, 6x/day every 2-hourly for the first week and reviews again) , this poodle would regain her weight and health first.

Further investigations would be needed and sometimes the owner has to be proactive and to want to spend the money on veterinary services.

I also forecasted death before the Chinese New Year since this was a dog with skin and bones. She survived past the Chinese New Year (2nd day of New Year as I write this article) but I had given her the necessary IV drips to live.

The prognosis is guarded. I don't think this poodle would live past 2 years. I dare not make a prediction as I may be proven wrong as what the first vet did. It is possible that there is a stick or branch stuck in the distal oesophagus. The dog can pass bowels normally in the last 2 days much to the delight of the wife. So, is it a case of myasthenia gravis or not? Another review if needed. The mystery has not been resolved yet.

Interesting case report written by a lady intern waiting for her 'A'-level results and before admission to vet course overseas.

Jan 31, 2011
Toy poodle “.....” with vomiting problem
Diagnosis
Dog has been vomiting regularly for 3 years
Blood test—normal, with slight anaemia; kidney tests show poor health
x-ray of stomach and neck taken
1st vet suspected problem with stomach but is likely to be in the throat—foreign body/tumour; dog has habit of eating grass and stones; 1st vet diagnosed an allergy to dog food hence home cooked food has been given to it since
2nd vet notes that dog vomits about ½ hour after eating and has advised the feeding of 1/3 portion home cooked food. Dog has become emaciated, is now unable to take anesthetic for surgery.
Treatment
Fed 5pcs of D/D and ¼ can K/D hourly; dog needs to gain weight and regain health before a surgery can be done. Antibiotics and multivitamins also given.
CONCLUSION
Megaoesophagus in the dog is a condition where there is a decreased or absent contraction of the muscles of the oesophagus. It can be congenital or acquired. Its cause may be idiopathic or it may be due to tumour (oesophageal carcinoma), vascular ring (heart blood vessels congenital) or obstruction (foreign body e.g. stick or bone inside distal oesophagus, endoscope or X-rays), neuromuscular dysfunction (myasthenia gravis).


Pic and updated webpage will be at:

http://www.toapayohvets.com/web1/20110204megaoesophagus-regurgitation-dog-toapayohvets-singapore.htm


Wednesday, February 2, 2011

322. Chinese New Year's Eve's discussion with intern - the economics of practice

Feb 2, 2011 Eve of Chinese New Year.

Old Silkie, 15 years, with two snow-white cataracts and fast-growing tumour on the neck area. Panting. The mum was much distressed. Teenaged daughter and dad were saddened. Euthanasia was the humane solution to stop the suffering and pain. It was Chinese New Year's eve and it was a joyous occasion but this had to be done.

I explained to intern Michelle (waiting for her A level results and getting to know much more about the practice of vet medicine) that a pyometra surgery could not be done for less than $1,000 - $2,000 if the surgery has lots of equipment as these assets need to be paid for. She had been impressed by one well equipped surgery in Singapore. In the end, the customer just would not want that vet to operate on her dog, due to economic reasons. I was charging $500 and that would be a lot of difference.

I don't know whether she understands. "If the surgery has a lot of clients, it will be possible to pay for more manpower," I said. "It has to charge higher fees too to pay for the expensive MRI scan equipment and others. Otherwise, there is no net profit at the end of the year and how is the owner going to earn a living? In reality, the owner may just lose the case to a more affordable vet, as in the case of pyometra in the Jack Russell you saw."


Feb 1, 2011
I visited an older vet to thank the vet for the oranges and bak kua present. The vet had just recovered from an illness. She explained to me her modus operandus when I told her that she should not reject big breeds neutering. A case from her had come to me. "No, I don't want to do it. Simple wounds and simple medical cases at the lowest cost will attract clients. I don't understand why vets would charge higher fees and get less cases."

This strategy was correct as most people prefer low fees. In Bishan, I used to see a general practitioner with a long queue compared to his competitor 4 doors away. Could be the former's low fees, I am sure.

I did not comment on her strategy as she was differentiating her services by not handling difficult surgery cases like neutering of big breed Golden Retriever or complicated ones like removal of stones in the dog's stomach. She just refers them to a big practice which calls itself the "... referral clinic" and whose staff from the Philippines run down her and others for not being so well equipped.

Besides being bad-mouthed by staff of referral clinics with their arrogant policies, if the vet charges low fees, it is hard to have sufficient savings to upgrade facilities and equipment as well as to pay staff. Many pet owners prefer to visit a "better-renovated" practice and pay a bit more as they enjoy the ambience and feel confident that the vet would do a better job. First impressions count.

321. Myanmar stories - The Psychic

Feb 1, 2011 (Monday)

"She's a very good psychic," Tun, a Myanmar businessman in his 40s and sporting a big paunch due to too many lunches and coffee meetings, related an incredible tale to me over lunch at Inle Lake Restaurant in Peninsula Plaza on Feb 1, 2011 after we had seen some office spaces for rent in Peninsula Plaza. "She goes overseas to consult. Even the top general seeks her advice (Tun mentioned his name)."

"This really happened?" I was incredulous.
"Yes," Tun said. "The used car salesman is working in Singapore. I can introduce him to you."
He had said that the used car salesman was owed a lot of money by an Indian man for a few years. So he consulted E.T who is a famous psychic in Myanmar. The debtor had said: "You can send gangsters to beat me up, the triads to kill me. I will not pay you." So, the salesman asked the psychic for help.

Tun related the following:

"E.T asked him to give me a dollar note. She then wrote 80% on the note and asked the salesman to bring it with him when he sees the debtor again. You will not get back 100% of your money but just 80%.

So the salesman left Yangon to fly back to Singapore. He saw the debtor carrying the note in his shirt pocket and asked for the return of his loan. The debtor said: "I am prepare to pay you but not every cent."

The salesman said: "Pay me 70% by September (of 2009) or 80% by December (of 2009).

The debtor said: "I will pay you 80% by December."

"Is that really true?" I asked again. "Yes," Tun said patiently. "I wanted my wife to make an appointment for me."

"Why?" I asked this congenial man.

"But my wife is overseas," he said.

There was another Myanmar couple at the lunch table but they did not doubt Tun's story. E.T charges US$40 per case and that is a lot of money for the average person in Myanmar. So, do you believe in this tale or not? Tun has no reason to tell a cock and bull story. I was talking about a Myanmar business man who was looking for old Jaguar cars from Singapore to sell in Myanmar. This was when Tun said that he knew of this large used-car company that had a lot of old Jaguars to sell. And that was then he related the story of E.T and this salesman in this company.

His friend who is an entreprenuer had said: "An old Jaguar in Yangon is half the price of a Toyota." I was surprised. He further surprised me by saying: "The housing agent in Yangon is called "worn-out sleepers and faded umbrellas. This is because he pounds the pavement till his slippers are worn out (unlike Singapore agents who drive a Mercedes) and worked under the hot afternoon sun till his umbrella colours fade away." I was surprised at such stereotypes of the realtor and did learn a bit about the culture in Myanmar. As for the psychic, I wonder whether I should make an appointment.














Psychic, clairvoyant, healer, master practitioner in the arts of black magic, tarot, numerology, palmistry and astrology.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Animal activism in Singapore: difficulties of the volunteer webmaster

E-MAIL FROM A NEW VOLUNTEER WEBMASTER DATED JAN 22, 2011

He explained to me that they have had bad volunteers who bad mouth them
and they are wary of accepting new volunteers. To ignore or turn off
potential volunteers is not helping them or the animals. If you treat
your volunteers like they are all bad people waiting to do something bad
to you, then who would want to work for free for you?


E-MAIL TO A NEW VOLUNTEER WEBMASTER DATED JAN 22, 2011


On 28/01/2011 03:29, Kong Yuen Sing wrote:
> You have done a good job and provided free service. That is good. The
> webmaster may be too old to learn new tricks or has no time. Well done.
> Volunteers come in different forms. Some are very dedicated but others
> quit after some time as no money is received. Pl be patient.

E-MAIL TO DR SING DATED JAN 29, 2011
Hi Dr Sing,
>
> I only moved it to .... and imported
> the content over from
> Blogger. Then I organised the content, added some contact/adoption forms
> and left it to them to do whatever they want with it.
>
> I was planning to do more for the web site but I asked the webmaster if
> he is willing to use the new features I had planned for him.
> Unfortunately, he said he is unwilling to learn to use them and post
> better written content and photos.
>
> I told the webmaster they need to take better photos and organise the
> content in a certain way like how I have done it for them. Initially,
> there was some resistance but in the end, it seems like they have taken
> up the suggestions. The older photos were terrible.
>
> So I told him if that is the case, I won't invest my time to create
> better features for his web site if he is not planning to use them.
>
> I think I will not do anything more to help them for now because they do
> not seem co-operative or appreciative.

E-MAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED JAN 29, 2011

Thanks for feedback. Voluntary work is never free from criticism by armchair critics and that makes the volunteer sensitive to outsiders. I think this group does not want much widespread publicity as the whole of Singapore's animal welfare activists will dump all stray cats and dogs at its doors (but not the donations). This does happen in real life when I speak to two such groups.


Animal activism is highly stressful for the volunteer webmaster who is usually dedicated to help find homes for the home-less dogs and cats using his IT skills which may be outdated as IT keeps changing and he probably is holding a full-time job.

My new volunteer webmaster friend wants to change the whole format and system. There is simply no time for the incumbent webmaster to do what he wants(as physically, time is limited for all volunteers since they have got to earn a living). The young is idealisitic. The incumbent old webmaster is pressed for time and money. The two sides will never meet.


In Singapore, the voluntary organisation for the homeless dogs and cats are always short of money as the numbers of strays grow in number. Volunteers are a big headache because of their demands for attention and time. Bad-mouthing critics, prowling tabloid journalists - this whole area needs a Human Resource Department to handle but small animal activist groups with little funding cannot provide this service.

Is it possible to sterilise 9-month-old cats? E-mail query to Dr Sing

E-MAIL TO DR SING DATED SAT JAN 29, 2011
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 1:44 PM, ...@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Sir/Madam,

I would like to sterilize two of my nine month old kittens (Ragdoll and Ragamuffin). Is it possible? If yes, what are the available timeslots? Thank you!

With regards,


E-MAIL FROM DR SING DATED SAT JAN 29, 2011
I am Dr Sing from Toa Payoh Vets. Thank you for your query.

It is possible to sterilise cats after 5-6 months of age. I don't advise sterilisation at 4-5 months of age although this is being done by some animal societies to prevent unwanted litter. Please make appointment at 6254-3326. No food and water after 10 pm the night before surgery. Appointment one day before surgery will be OK.

Friday, January 28, 2011

re-train older dog to pee - email query to Dr Sing

Hi,

EMAIL TO DR SING DATED JAN 27, 2011
I came across your webpage accidentally while looking for help.

My toy poodle (male) is currently 11 months old. He is trained to pee and poo inside his cage and he is not kept in the cage. However, he started to pee and poo everywhere since 2 months back. I tried re-training him to pee and poo inside his cage but failed. We have since keep his cage cos he has out-grown it and now we want to train him to pee and poo at 1 place. How do i re-train him to pee and poo at the correct place? Especially the sofa, he will jump up and pee there....he wont pee there again before we wash the covers but do so after we have washed the covers.

Your kind advice is greatly appreciated.


Thanks and regards,


EMAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED JAN 27, 2011

I am Dr Sing from Toa Payoh Vets. The dog has taken a liking to pee on clean "fabric" through his sense of touch. To re-train, confine him to a small area (balcony, kitchen etc) and leash him (be careful of strangulation) for at least 2-4 weeks. No other way if you have no time to take him outdoors or train him daily by strict supervision of elimination. Hope this helps.



EMAIL TO DR SING DATED JAN 28, 2011

Hi Dr Sing,

Thank you for your reply.

When you say confine him and leash him, do you mean to the place where we want him to pee/poo?



Thank you and regards,

EMAIL TO DR SING DATED JAN 28, 2011

Yes. In that way, he has a restricted area to sleep and eat which will be his clean area. He will go to a nearby area to pee and poop. Since most dogs are clean creatures, they will not want to soil the sleeping area. Leash restricts his area. A small room or bigger crate will provide the same function.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Myanmar stories: A successful Myanmar entrepreneur

Jan 26, 2011

SUCCESS BUSINESS STORIES FOR YOUNG SINGAPOREANS

I met this successful Myanmar entrepreneur in Khin Khin's office today. Khin Khin and he were keying in employment data for S pass Myanmar prospect as he waited for his employment agency licence to be given to him 2 weeks later.

He started by giving entrepreneurship lectures some 10 years ago, charging around $10/person/hour. I remember one of my old clients doing the same and asked him: "Did you rent an office in Excelsior Hotel building to conduct lectures?" He laughed: "Yes." Now he has set up an Asian restaurant in Yangon and is in the midst of a building development project with Singapore partners.


TIPS FROM HIM
Be focused on one aspect

"Why do you need to wait for 2 weeks to get your licence?" I asked him. Asking is when one learns. "Normally, the MOM renews the licence without you having to wait."

He said: "I have set up a private limited company. So, everything starts from the beginning."

"So, you have Singapore partners," I guessed. "What is your share of the company?"

"30%," he said. "The two Singapore partners take 70% but I do all the operational work running around."

"Why will you be doing all the work and give your partners 70%?" I asked. "It does not make sense to me. You should be the one getting the major share. Are you paid a salary to be the working partner?"

This where the financial structure is important. How much to pay a working partner equitably without exhausting the $50,000 all 3 parties had put in. Real capital, not just paper ones.

"No salary. I get $1,500 per case closed." The fee for securing an S Pass is $3,500. So, $2,000 goes to the company and he still gets 30%. This sounds OK to me.

"I just can't believe that the two Singapore partners are sleeping partners," I enquired. It is possible but why would this smart entrepreneur give them 70% of the shares? He would have his capital since he had been working for some years. And judging from his looks of a man who looks well fed, I know he would not have problems raising $50,000 or less. At 3 closings a month, he would have an income of $4,500. He would have other sources of income, being a diligent, friendly entrepreneur.

Why give 70% to 2 sleeping partners. Khin Khin supplied the answer. The partners (probably realtors) have connections with Singapore employers in the industrial park. They provided the important link as there are more prospective Myanmar employees than employers.

"Don't you provide Myanmar maids?" I asked.
"No," he said. "Income from one S pass is equal to 5 maids. And much less people problems."

So a higher value prospective employee and a private limited and collaboration with Singaporeans are some factors of success for this Myanmar entrepreneur. He invited me to dine at his Asian restaurant in Yangon.

Mum and two sons and a rabbit being neutered

"I live quite far away," the mum of two pre-teen sons of 1.5 years difference in age gap said. "Can I wait in the clinic for the neuter to be completed and bring the rabbit home?"

"Yes, you can do that," I said. "However, you bear the risk as the rabbit after anaesthesia has not waken up normally yet. If he dies at home later due to the stress of being transported home immediately after surgery, you will blame the vet. It is a risk but not a big risk. Rabbits are more sensitive than dogs to anaesthesia."

"The boys do not want to part with the rabbit," the mum said. She did not want to take the risk. "Here's some hay for the rabbit," she came back to the Surgery with a plastic bag of hay. "OK, I will put the hay and the pellets in the crate after neuter," I doubted that the rabbit would eat immediately. However it does eat if given pain-killers post-op.

At 7 pm, she took the rabbit home. I showed her the rabbit's bottom to confirm there was no bleeding. The rabbit had woken up. Rabbits don't wag their tail and so there was no good indications.

ANAESTHESIA
6 month old dwarf rabbit. male.
Domitor 0.1 ml ear vein. Isoflurane gas needed to top up. Rabbit OK and goes home 6 hours after neuter.

P.S
The mum told me that she came to this practice as Toa Payoh Vets has "good" vets from her internet research. I did not ask further. The internet can also say bad things about vets too.

muzzle to stop a shih tzu puppy barking?

On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 1:33 PM, Ang soon Lee wrote:

Hi Judy,
I am wondering whether i can buy and collect the cloth muzzle for my two month shih tzu puppy today? Can you call me on my handphone:xxx
Look forward to your reply soon.
Cheer



E-MAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED JAN 27, 2011

I am Dr Sing. We spoke. A muzzle is not suitable for Shih Tzu's puppy or any dog for long periods of time. They may suffocate. You will need to train him from barking for attention and this takes practice (e.g. reward with treats, time-out system) and a "bossy" command of "no barking". I hope my advice will work. Some owners grip the puppy's muzzle when it barks and say firmly "no barking". You may find this approach useful if you are the "bossy" type as the puppy soon respects you. One working lady told me she has great success in using this approach and I believe it is her strong personality that helps too.

Best wishes.

3-year-old Pug with difficulty urinating

INTERESTING CASES ON WEDNESDAY JAN 26, 2011


I asked intern, Michelle to write down the following rather than being an observer. She has just completed her A levels and is waiting for the A-level results and wants to study vet medicine. So, I spent some time on this case with her to make vet medicine alive for her when I am free as she does not really benefit from case studies as she is not in Vet course yet.

The Pug had a complaint as follows:
Not able to pee normally for past 2 days. "But he pees normally at one big lot yesterday," the lady who loves pugs wanted to consult me as she had a black pug seen by me some 18 years ago. The black pug had passed away from old age and she never had such problems for the 3 pugs she had. Now, this pug that does not look like a "pug" because he had a longer body and not broad chested had dysuria (difficulty in urination). He had been operated on by an expensive vet one year ago ($2,000 for the whole urinary stone surgery case etc).

"The vet removed the kidney stones," the lady told me but had no medical records from the vet.

"Are you sure it is kidney stones?" I asked her as she was satisfied that the dog had recovered and that was what mattered. The dog had been on S/D diet for one month and C/D diet for 3 months. Then only home-cooked food for the last 8 months. Dysuria occurred 2 days ago. So she consulted me as she surfed the internet.

I was in charge of this case working closely with my associate Dr Vanessa Lin.

PALPATION OF BLADDER, URINE TEST AND BLOOD TEST
1. Empty bladder. So, I asked the owner to let me keep the dog till his bladder is full and I can collect urine for analysis of urinary stones and crystals as well as other tests. There is no point catheterisation at this stage to collect urine as the bladder was emptied recently. Blood was taken. An IV drip was given to get some urine produced.

2. URETHRAL OBSTRUCTION
Dr Vanessa told me that the catheter could not be passed through for more than 10 cm, i.e.. beyond the os penis. I advised X-ray and a spasmogesic injection to be given to relax the bladder muscles. She gave the spasmogesic injection and did the X-ray before 5 pm. She used a smaller hard-catheter and could get the urine out (around 20 ml in a collection bottle) for laboratory analysis.

I checked the pug at 6 pm with the owner who came to visit. The pug was put on the floor. He was very happy. He lifted his leg and peed around 20 ml of dark brown urine. The nurse matron apologised but I said it was OK and a common incident. The intern mopped away the urine.

The following is Michelle's case report is as follows:

3) Pug with difficulty urinating

Catheter could not go through; obstruction in the urinary tract; small bladder stone detected using x-ray

Urinated at 6.30pm; dipstick test:

pH 7.0

WBC 1.00+

Blood ±

Colour of urine: orange-yellow

Protein 2.00+

Specific gravity: 1.015


"The dipstick results are not as accurate as urine analysis," I told Michelle. "The urine test report will be in tomorrow and compare the results."

ADVICE FROM DR SING
Each vet has his or her own method of treatment. For me, the diagnosis is urethral obstruction behind the os penis (based on catherisation mainly). "The X-ray showed some opaque sand behind the os penis," I said to the owner. "What happens is that it causes pain and so the dog has dysuria. After the pain subsided, the sand particles go back to the bladder and so the dog could pee a large amount of urine at one go. Till the next episode."

"What is the treatment?" the lady asked me. "The dog can't be peeing with difficulty now and then."

"Be patient," I said. I advised a low dose of prednisolone and let Dr Vanessa Lin know about this approach. Pred brings down inflammation and let the sand particles be passed out. This is my rationale for the treatment but each vet will have his or her own approach.

Antibiotics for the next 2 days. The dog would drink water and urohydropropulsion can be used to flush out the sand particles. This would be tried first before another bladder surgery which the owner was not keen to do. This case may not need the bladder surgery but the owner must be patient for dietary and medical treatment. This is where many owners want fast results. Bladder surgery would resolve the problem fast but there is the owner's wish not to have it. It would not cost her $2,000 but economics do play a great part for the owner.

This is Day 1. The pug had passed urine at 6.30 pm with some difficulty (leg held up for more than 60 seconds). Will wait and see.

Dr Vanessa phoned the previous vet and was told that the urinary stone removed was 95% struvite. As every urinary case is different and every vet has his or her approach, my management of this case may differ from that of my associate vet. The urinary pH on dipstick is 7.0. So, a vet could argue that the urine is not alkaline. Struvites stone form in alkaline ph but a pH 7.0 on urine dipstick shows neutral pH.

Dietary and medical management, instead of surgery may be possible. Will update when urine test pH and crystal results come in today.