TOA
PAYOH VETS toapayohvets.com Date: 18 January, 2013
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Electro-excision of a large
tumour in a dwarf hamster Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS Date: 18 January, 2013 |
toapayohvets.com
Be Kind To Pets Veterinary Education Project 2010-0129 |
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Yesterday, Jan 16, 2013, two older women from "Street 12" came with a 64-g female dwarf hamster aged 1 year and 6 months. She had a gigantic tumour near her left hip. "She's biting the lump", one woman said to me. There was a scab of 2 mm x 2 mm due to the hamster's bite. ANAESTHESIA & SURGERY Dr Daniel is convinced that electro-surgery is useful and efficient as he used electro-excision to incise the skin (see video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6d03LrHZS8). He excised the tumour which had some abscesses. I weighed the hamster after surgery. She was 50 kg. A heavy weight had been taken out. It was a high risk anaesthesia as the hamster was quite plump and the tumour was massive. However the hamster was still eating. 3 drops of Zoletil 50 was insufficient. "Don't use a large volume of normal saline to top up the syringe," I said to Dr Daniel. "The back muscles of the dwarf hamster is very little. It will be like the doctor injecting 20 ml of liquid into you back muscles. I usually top up the 3 drops of Zoletil up to 0.05 ml in the 1-ml syringe with normal saline before injecting the back muscles of the hamster (see video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6d03LrHZS8). I had to use the mask to gas the hamster with isoflurane gas a few times as the Zoletil 50 was insufficient in this plump hamster. Possibly 4 drops would be more effective in a 64-gram hamster or it could be too much and causes death. Much depends on the vet's judgment and experience. The tumour was 14 g in weight! This is where the risks of death increase because it is not possible to monitor the hamster's breathing and heart rate (ECG, blood pressure monitoring are not practical in a dwarf hamster). Any overdose of the isoflurane gas meant instant death. No such thing as resuscitation. So, I monitored the anaesthesia top up while Dr Daniel operated. It was touch and go. I had to make sure that the hamster was just below the surgical anaesthesia stage and so you would see some leg movement during stitching. It is NOT possible to achieve the ideal surgical anaesthetic stage as in the dog and cat. The dwarf hamster is so small. "Surgery must be speedy," I said to Dr Daniel. "Undermine the skin, isolate the tumour, clamp the base with a curved forceps, excise the lump and stitch the skin with 6/0 interrupted sutures. All these to be done in less than 3 minutes." The slower the vet operated, the more the anaesthesia had to be given and this is where the hamster "dies" on the operating table. CHECKING THE ACCURACY OF OWNER'S ADDRESS The had written "Street 12" in the address. I asked whether she had left out "Bishan Street 12"? Vets must check the records of addresses. She said "Pasir Ris Street 12". I asked an intern to do this case study. She did a video and the link is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6d03LrHZS8. There is a problem with the absence of sounds, using Windows movie maker. There appears to be no solution from the interns. CONCLUSION The hamster took some time to wake up. Two female interns were present. One of them was a single child. She spent much time with this hamster. "Look, she is vomiting the seeds," this lady intern said to me as she observed the surgery and did some video filming of the operation. "The hamster is dislodging the food from her cheek pouch as she is stressed by the surgery and anaesthesia," I told her. "This is a common occurrence. She is not vomiting." Her parents allowed her to keep one cat. Yesterday I told the parents whom I knew from 20 years ago that this daughter should adopt more stray cats in her apartment. The mother wanted to kill me. "Don't you dare to suggest this," the mother said to me. Many Singapore parents dote on the single child and will tolerate them bringing home stray dogs and cats or buy a puppy. In the end, it is the parents who have to care fore them. Yet yesterday, I met a mother, an old client, from Bukit Panjang. Her 15-year-old Maltese X bought by her daughter long ago is so precious to the mother. The dog came in as she behaved aggressively when carried. The mother knew it was due to false pregnancy. Lots of white milk were present in the dog's swollen mammary glands. This dog still had estrus bleeding 2-3 months ago. At the age of 15 years which is equivalent to 105 years in a human being . This is in contrast to menopause in women at the age of 50 - 60 years. I asked permission for my intern to take pictures for her case study and she said OK. "Don't feed her," I said to the single child as the hamster after surgery, wanted to store the seeds. The plump hamster laid on her back and sipped water from the water bottle while lying on her back, making her laugh. The owner came in the afternoon to take the hamster home. The vet must deliver a hamster alive at the surgery. The anaesthesia is the killing part and this is where a vet's reputation is smeared if the hamster dies on the operating table. No deaths should occur if the anaesthesia is minimal and the surgery speedy, but this cannot be guaranteed. FOLLOW-UP 24 HOURS LATER
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Pet health and care advices for pet owners and vet students, photography tips, travel stories, advices for young people
Friday, January 18, 2013
Update: Large tumour video and case follow up - hamster's 14-g large tumour
Thursday, January 17, 2013
1250. Follow up on plump dwarf hamster 64kg with large tumour
Jan 17, 2013
I phoned the Pasir Ris lady at 11.45 am and reached her on her home phone to ensure she does the proper post-op nursing and medication. Sometimes, vets are too busy and will not phone if the mobile phone does not answer.
"She is eating and drinking water and active," the Indian lady said. "She is more active than before (surgery). I didn't know she has stopped exercising. I pushed the 1-ml syringe too much and spilled the medicine..."
"It's OK as the hamster just needs 2 drops/day for the next 3 days and the syringe has more than sufficient."
"Can I shampoo her?" she asked. "I do it every week. She was not happy at first but now she looks forward to the water bath as the weather is too hot nowadays."
"No bathing for the next 14 days," I said. The other instructions are:
1. Use a facial cotton piece, add clean warm water and clean the surgical wound 2x/day for the next 14 days.
2. Stitches will dissolve on their own in 21-30 days. No need to come for stitches being taken out.
3. No wood shavings as bedding.
4. No exercise wheel.
5. Give medication
6. No bathing for 14 days
I phoned the Pasir Ris lady at 11.45 am and reached her on her home phone to ensure she does the proper post-op nursing and medication. Sometimes, vets are too busy and will not phone if the mobile phone does not answer.
"She is eating and drinking water and active," the Indian lady said. "She is more active than before (surgery). I didn't know she has stopped exercising. I pushed the 1-ml syringe too much and spilled the medicine..."
"It's OK as the hamster just needs 2 drops/day for the next 3 days and the syringe has more than sufficient."
"Can I shampoo her?" she asked. "I do it every week. She was not happy at first but now she looks forward to the water bath as the weather is too hot nowadays."
"No bathing for the next 14 days," I said. The other instructions are:
1. Use a facial cotton piece, add clean warm water and clean the surgical wound 2x/day for the next 14 days.
2. Stitches will dissolve on their own in 21-30 days. No need to come for stitches being taken out.
3. No wood shavings as bedding.
4. No exercise wheel.
5. Give medication
6. No bathing for 14 days
1249. Follow up on 3-year-old cat with recurring FLUTD
Jan 17, 2013
No news is good news. The lady owner didn't phone me. I phoned her at 10.47am to find out about her cat as part of my research on FLUTD treatment. It is best practice to follow up in any case, but many vets don't do it.
I tried to phone the Tampines girl whose male Miniature Schnauzer, born in 2004, had spikey bladder stones removed in August 17, 2007 by her young vet operating together with me. This case study was written by me as she was a veterinary clinic helper and her vet was a younger vet doing his first bladder stone surgery with me.
Her mobile phone seemed "dead". No answer and then a dying sound. I phoned her home and hIer mum said the dog is OK, took my mobile phone for her to call me. I asked her vet to call me. No response. The dog did not have recurrence of bladder stones despite being fed dry food!
CASE OF THE RECURRING FLUTD CAT
"Totally normal," she said happily. "He was fully recovered yesterday, around 6 days after the problem." The cat was so aggressive when she brought him for treatment on Jan 11, 2013. This time, she was prompt in seeking treatment and so the urine did not look red as at 22 months earlier when FLUTD first manifested. "Continue feeding the C/D + water and no other food," I replied. So far so good.
Follow up provides the vet with feedback on the efficacy of his management and treatment. I sent the cat back home with in-dwelling cathether on the same day. The cat ripped off the catheter the next day although he had an e-collar. The case is written in a blog a few days ago.
The X-rays do not show radio-dense struvites. Negative crystals in the urine doNOT mean that there are no struvites inside the bladder. In any case, with medication and irrigation of the bladder under sedation, the cat recovered fully 6 days after treatment and the lady owner is most happy. This time, she was prompt in seeking treatment and there was no need for fluid therapy and hospitalisation as occurred 22 months ago.
Many Singapore pet owners delay seeking treatment of difficulty in urination of their dogs or cats and the outcome may not be so favourable as much inflammation and damage to the bladder had been done owing to the delay in seeking prompt vet treatment.
No news is good news. The lady owner didn't phone me. I phoned her at 10.47am to find out about her cat as part of my research on FLUTD treatment. It is best practice to follow up in any case, but many vets don't do it.
I tried to phone the Tampines girl whose male Miniature Schnauzer, born in 2004, had spikey bladder stones removed in August 17, 2007 by her young vet operating together with me. This case study was written by me as she was a veterinary clinic helper and her vet was a younger vet doing his first bladder stone surgery with me.
Her mobile phone seemed "dead". No answer and then a dying sound. I phoned her home and hIer mum said the dog is OK, took my mobile phone for her to call me. I asked her vet to call me. No response. The dog did not have recurrence of bladder stones despite being fed dry food!
CASE OF THE RECURRING FLUTD CAT
"Totally normal," she said happily. "He was fully recovered yesterday, around 6 days after the problem." The cat was so aggressive when she brought him for treatment on Jan 11, 2013. This time, she was prompt in seeking treatment and so the urine did not look red as at 22 months earlier when FLUTD first manifested. "Continue feeding the C/D + water and no other food," I replied. So far so good.
Follow up provides the vet with feedback on the efficacy of his management and treatment. I sent the cat back home with in-dwelling cathether on the same day. The cat ripped off the catheter the next day although he had an e-collar. The case is written in a blog a few days ago.
The X-rays do not show radio-dense struvites. Negative crystals in the urine doNOT mean that there are no struvites inside the bladder. In any case, with medication and irrigation of the bladder under sedation, the cat recovered fully 6 days after treatment and the lady owner is most happy. This time, she was prompt in seeking treatment and there was no need for fluid therapy and hospitalisation as occurred 22 months ago.
Many Singapore pet owners delay seeking treatment of difficulty in urination of their dogs or cats and the outcome may not be so favourable as much inflammation and damage to the bladder had been done owing to the delay in seeking prompt vet treatment.
1248. Two interns: Electro-excision tumours in 2 dwarf hamsters
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1247. Miccroscope to show images on laptop screen to client
The instructions for the microscope
Inbox
x
Inbox
Chen Yuying |
| Jan 4 (13 days ago) | |
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These instructions are important for the vet. It is good to show the images to clients but the vet sometimes don't bother as it is too troublesome..
Connect the microscope using the USB cable to the USB port
Start
Programs
ScopeTek
ScopePhoto
Acquire
Live Capture
ScopeTek DCM310
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Start
Programs
ScopeTek
ScopePhoto
Acquire
Live Capture
ScopeTek DCM310
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To take a photo:
Top left corner, click 'capture a frame' and another window box will appear. Click the red X on the new window and a pop up saying 'image has been modified. Need save?' Click yes.
To view one of the shots previously taken, click file on the top left hand. Click open image and then choose which image you want.
1246. Animal activism. An abandoned animal shelter
Straits Times Jan 11, 2013 report: 31 dogs rescued from 'abandoned' animal shelter.
In Singapore, the government had designated some land in Pasir Ris as spaces for dogs. Entrepreneurs bidded for the land and build the kennels or tanks to house the approved species of animals like dogs, cats and fishes. They developed the land and rent out the kennels to private individuals, some of whom operated animal shelters.
However rentals are very high compared to other countries with lots of land. Hence some animal activists find that they can't sustain their operations as they board more homeless dogs. After some years if they don't have financial donations if they could not manage their operations. This would be probably what happened when volunteers at Madam Yap's Shelter in Pasir Ris had not seen its operator for many week and 31 dogs were 'abandoned'.
In animal shelters, the dogs needed to be vaccinated against the serious viral diseases of distemper and parvoviruses. They needed heartworm disease and tick prevention. However, it is extremely difficult to do all these preventive disease program if the shelter has insufficient funds.
A few days ago, I met an animal activist who rented Pasir Ris kennels for $8,000 per month. She had given up this shelter and relocated the dogs or rehomed them.She said Pasir Ris kennels would be taken back by the government in 2014.
Madam Yap's shelter is reported to cost $4,000 a month to operate. This included rent, utilities and a full-time worker but not food and treatment for the sick dogs. Save Our Street Dogs has taken over the place. Their email is sostreetdog@gmail.com
There is another shelter called Madam Wong's shelter which is still operational, according to my intern who visited Pasir Ris last Sunday, being driven there by her father who doted on her. I had asked her to write an essay on "Animal Activism in Singapore".
In Singapore, the government had designated some land in Pasir Ris as spaces for dogs. Entrepreneurs bidded for the land and build the kennels or tanks to house the approved species of animals like dogs, cats and fishes. They developed the land and rent out the kennels to private individuals, some of whom operated animal shelters.
However rentals are very high compared to other countries with lots of land. Hence some animal activists find that they can't sustain their operations as they board more homeless dogs. After some years if they don't have financial donations if they could not manage their operations. This would be probably what happened when volunteers at Madam Yap's Shelter in Pasir Ris had not seen its operator for many week and 31 dogs were 'abandoned'.
In animal shelters, the dogs needed to be vaccinated against the serious viral diseases of distemper and parvoviruses. They needed heartworm disease and tick prevention. However, it is extremely difficult to do all these preventive disease program if the shelter has insufficient funds.
A few days ago, I met an animal activist who rented Pasir Ris kennels for $8,000 per month. She had given up this shelter and relocated the dogs or rehomed them.She said Pasir Ris kennels would be taken back by the government in 2014.
Madam Yap's shelter is reported to cost $4,000 a month to operate. This included rent, utilities and a full-time worker but not food and treatment for the sick dogs. Save Our Street Dogs has taken over the place. Their email is sostreetdog@gmail.com
There is another shelter called Madam Wong's shelter which is still operational, according to my intern who visited Pasir Ris last Sunday, being driven there by her father who doted on her. I had asked her to write an essay on "Animal Activism in Singapore".
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
1245. Recurring FLUTD in a cat
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