Wednesday, February 20, 2013

1299. Email advices on toilet training






------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 1:20 PM, E@yahoo.com.sg> wrote:
Hi, I need your advice.
I have a toy poodle, she is spayed and can pee on tray 100%. But when she was 3 years old, I brought home a mini poodle puppy.
Since then she refuse to pee on the same tray. I put another tray in another room, she pee on the new tray some times. And rest of the times, she pee on the floor around the tray that the new dog pee.
I cant grab her to put her on the tray as she is very aggressive, and growl and bite.
I have tried to give her more attention, and also tried to beat her, but she just get worse
What should I do?
Thanks first


EMAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED FEB 16, 2013
 
From: Kong Yuen Sing <99pups@gmail.com>;
To: E@yahoo.com.sg>;
Subject: Re: Need help
Sent: Sat, Feb 16, 2013 11:55:32 PM

Hi
Thank you for your email. It is not easy to give advice in your situation of two poodles competing for your attention. Have you tried "positive reinforcement" method of treats and praises for performance? Or the clicker method?

1. Spend time with the old poodle.
2. When she pees on the tray, give her treats and/or praises or bring her for exerciseThis depends which motivates her.
3. Use the old tray which has her urine smell. What happened to it?
4. Neutralise the urine smell on the floor.
5. Confine to small area again as in puppy toilet training.
6. Spay her if relevant.
7. Many weeks and months of positive reinforcement training may be needed to change the behaviour as the dog is an adult and not a puppy with ease of training.
8. Ensure she has no urinary tract infection - check with your vet. Urine test.
9. There may be a need to separate both poodles for some time and to wash your hands when you handle the younger poodle before handling the older one.
10. Pee trays may NEED to be washed frequently if your old poodle is a cleanliness freak and this may be one reason she will not pee on the pee pan but outside the perimeter..
11. Use the commercial pee pads to absorb the urine as a different approach and trial?

The above are some of my suggestions and I don't know whether they will work. Best wishes.


------------------------------------------------------------



On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 8:29 PM, E..yahoo.com.sg> wrote:
Hi sorry, need to add. My old poodle is aggressive. Its tough to grab her to bring her to the tray like she was a puppy as she growl n bite. Would you recommend a behavorist to resolve tos aggression?

Sent from Yahoo! Mail on Android
 

 

EMAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED FEB 20, 2013
There must be a reason for her aggressive. See your vet for medical problems or a behaviorist.


 

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

1298. The "lau hong" Scottish Terrier

Since adoption in Nov 2011, this Scottish Terrier of 2 years 4 months, male dog had been farting almost daily. I reviewed his case records as he had been to see us for 7 times. The first time was Nov 2011 when he had vomited. In April 2012 he vomited and in Feb 2013 I was the vet attending to his vomiting again.  This dog was described as a "habitual scavenger" by my associate. He would eat any food, eat the wooden stair case, lick any floor, drink his own urine and ate his own stools when he was young.

"I call him the 'lau hong' dog", the gentleman owner laughed when I spoke to him by phone on Feb 18, 2013, two days after treatment for vomiting 3 times and telling him that the dog's intestines were full of gas. A state of flatulence which had existed for over 2 weeks, he had said on Feb 16, 2013.  

"Does he pass smelly gas?" I asked.
"I don't know as I don't smell it specifically."
"The smell of the gas will let us know what sort of bacteria and damage to the intestines occur," I explained.
"Sometimes, it is smelly. He keeps farting daily."

To the owner, this behaviour is normal. It is actually not normal. He consented to a blood test as he did not want one earlier nor an X-ray. Economics play a big role in heartlander practice.

Blood test revealed a lower than normal white cell count 5.2 (normal 6-17). Elevated PCV at 0.64 would give rise o an increase in RBC 9.4 (5.5-8.5) and haemoglobin 22 (12-18). The liver enzymes SGPT/ALT 119 (<59 0.19="" 10.7="" 472="" acid="" and="" br="" creatinine="" high="" normal.="" sgot="" so="" urea="" uric="" was="" were="">
What do the blood test tell me?
 
One blood test may not be reliable. It seems there is liver disorder and reduced white cell count. Was there a virus? The dog did not have his yearly vaccination.

What caused so much gas production in the intestines?




1297. Resection of a cancerous tumour in a Syrian hamster

On Valentine's Day, Dr Daniel and I operated to remove a huge blackened skin lump of 1.3 x 1.3 x 0.5 cm from the left shoulder of the 2-year-old Syrian hamster.

The ideal way in dogs would be to resect the skin of 1 cm away from the edge of the skin tumour according to the vet book to cut off any spreading cancer cells.

A Syrian hamster's shoulder area is so small. This is not practical as the wound would be so big that the stitching of the wound will not be possible.

In this hamster, the tumour was cut off. The owner did not want it to be sent to the lab for histology. It looked much like a cancerous tumour. Toa Payoh Vets would send it for confirmation.

Test showed it was malignant.  

Hamster skin growths need to be removed by the vet when they are small as there is the danger of spreading and insufficient skin to cut off and to stitch up after resection.

Also anaesthesia by gas to top up as the surgery and stitching took some time. How much of gas to give by mask?  This is a judgment of the vet.

"Insufficient," Dr Daniel said as he stitched up the wound after I took off the mask after giving a few seconds of 5% isoflurane and the hamster moved a bit.

"Every vet can operate on any size of large skin tumours in the hamster," I told him. "The only difference is which vet can operate such that the hamster survives at the end of the operation."  5% isoflurane is very potent to a hamster. 2 or 3 seconds of smell will do to top up Zoletil sedation which was need in this type of large tumour removal surgery. The hamster had 5 drops Zoletil 50 IM but was still not fully sedated. Hence the isoflurane gas top up. This is where the judgment of the vet comes in. A second more may just kill the hamster unlike that in the dog.

Hence there is a layman's belief that hamsters die on the operating table easily and many vets prefer not to operate but give medication for tumour cases. Medication never works. Anaesthesia may kill.  So, many hamster owners wait and wait till there is no choice but to operate. By that time, as in this case, the tumour is massive and not all cancerous cells can be taken out.

I warn the owner that the tumour may recur again as it was not possible to make a big cut and to have sufficient skin to stitch up. The lab report indicated the resection  margin had tumour cells and so I expected the tumour to recur. 

1296. Blank CD of digital X-ray

Yesterday, Feb 18, 2013 I brought a Jack Russell to a clinic for X-ray. The owner brought the dog in saying to Dr Daniel and I: "I heard a crutch....crutch...crutch...sound and this dog was under my car. If his injuries are too severe, put him to sleep."

"The dog must have slept under the car," I said.
"My SUV car has a high floor and he could be running under the wheels."
The dog was standing but limping on the right hind limb. Dr Daniel put the dog his left side on the examination table and gently palpated the right foot and lower limb. There was no pain reaction. I was beside him and so I flexed the right hip. The dog yelped. So there was intense pain and some swelling in the hip area.

Dr Daniel said: "There are muscle tremors in the right hip area" meaning that the car trauma would be in that area rather than the foot.

Was there a hip fracture? However, the dog looked


I had known this gentleman for over 20 years and though he can well afford any veterinary expenses, I know sometimes he will not want to pay and so I said: "If you want to want to save money, wait till tomorrow while we give the pain-killers." He was undecided. If the dog has a serious injury, then he would euthanase her.

So Dr Daniel decided on 3 X-rays - the abdomen one view and the hips 2 views. The storm clouds were gathering this afternoon. But I took the dog inside the crate to this clinic for the X-rays. The male vet was busy talking to a client and I said hello to him. Another vet attended to another client who wanted to borrow the "wheel chair" for his paralysed lame dog. The principal vet was busy consulting with clients. It seemed to be a bustling clinic in this stormy afternoon with a government department warning of flash floods.  

So, I did not bother them. After the X-ray, I waited a while for the drizzle to stop and read a Pets' Magazine. A slim  frontline girl in light yellow uniform asked me whether I wanted an umbrella. I said yes and she gave me one. I took the dog out. Another staff (a volunteer) in greyish blue uniform was behind me and helped to open my car door so I could put the dog crate in. Service from the front-line staff was excellent in this clinic.  As there was a "We reserve the right not to serve you" notice on the lower front of the receptionist table, I did not make any conversation with the staff. In case of misunderstanding? Actually they were too busy to make idle conversation too. Once I got into the car, the storm clouds burst.

On returning to Toa Payoh Vets, Intern Ms Toh came out to take the crate and the CD of the X-ray. "This CD is blank," Dr Daniel said to me. I was much amazed as this had not happened before. How did it happen? I don't know. Dr Daniel phoned the clinic to ask for the email copy. I answered the phone when the clinic called. The staff manning the phone said: "You will have to wait a while for us to email to Dr Daniel. The vets are busy."

Cock ups do happen in the service industry. It is one of those surprises in life. This must be a rare occurrence.      

Monday, February 18, 2013

1295. Porto-systemic shunt in a young dog?

Feb 18, 2013

I note that many young vets who have grown up in an era of abundance don't have much spare time for more detailed research as they have their own hobbies and friends who want to go on vacations and spend late nights networking.  The start up of their new clinics are paid for by benefactors and not from their sweat and tears.

However, research needs to be done if they want to excel in their profession and gain a solid reputation for being good at diagnosis and treatment. There is no short cut to veerinary excellence and the necessary sacrifices of hours must be spent in doing reading and reviewing challenging cases.

One example of a challenging cases I encountered was this very thin Maltese puppy who barked a lot, mostly at night and liked to lick objects and things. "He barks mostly at night because we don't permit him to enter our bedroom," the young lady side of a couple said to me.  "My dad has to work overnight shifts and gets disturbed."

"Why don't you cage him at night and put him in the kitchen?" I said.
"He still barks."
So there was no solution.

"He has another problem. He will like all foreign objects and things and would vomit hairs! Can we muzzle him the whole day long?"

"Dogs need to breathe through panting and muzzling for a long time may kill them," I said. So there was no solution.

"He also urine marks all over the apartment," the lady said.
"Neuter him early," I said. "It will reduce his dominant personality. You will note that he is a dominant male and has no respect for female family members."

"You are quite correct," the young man confirmed. "He only listens to me if I am around."

"This dog is very thin, as if he has not been fed much," I said. "Or is there something wrong with his health? I advise a health screening blood test to check the liver and kidney functions as well as the blood system."

A blood test was agreed. The results show liver disorders in that ALT/SGPT = 294 (normal <59 0.02="" 262="" 6.8="" acid="" and="" ast="" at="" high="" nbsp="" normal="" slightly="" urea="" uric="" was="">and creatinine was low at 82 (normal 89-177).
 Haemoglobin was high at 19.6 (normal = 12-18).

The main disorder was the high liver enzymes. Uric acid is normal. Serum urea is slightly high.   Is there an early onset of a  porto-systemic shunt or not? Congential liver disease? Liver damage due to licking of floors and objects getting poisoned?

I phoned the owner for a urine test to check for urate crystalluria. Due to economics, I did not ask earlier.  Will need to follow up on this case.



Skin disease can be due to multiple causes

 




tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)TOA PAYOH VETS
toapayohvets.com

Date:   18 February, 2013  
 

Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs & rabbits
The dog has itchy joints and genital areas 
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   18 February, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129
 
On Sun, Feb 17, 2013 at 7:11 PM, @hotmail.com> wrote:
 

Hi Toa Payoh Vets,

I am L.., the owner of my White Maltese Dog named P... I brought P...
to your clinic about 2 months ago, when he had skin irritation/rashes.
After shaving him bald and removing all carpets/clothes at home, I am glad
that his skin rashes are now gone.

However, he is suffering from some kind of "dry skin". I have attached
some pictures. This redness/dry skin came back a month ago.
The affected areas are mostly on his feet, joint of his forearms & genital
area. I am not sure whether this is caused by him licking himself, causing such
redness/dry skin or he licks himself because of the dry skin.
I actually used the Elizabeth collar on him already, but he still manages to lick
himself. In addition, I am currently only feeding him the Z/d prescription
diet that you introduced. Hence, it should not be caused by food
allergies. Also, I don't think it might be caused by external
surroundings, as I only walk him out once a week (cause he is still
suffering from the irritation).

Please advise me further. Thanks!
 
PS: Thanks for solving the skin rashes problem. My family greatly
appreciate your help!

Best Regards,
Name & Handphone given
 

EMAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED Feb 18, 2013

Thank you for your email and clear images of paw, joint and inguinal area showing inflammation of the skin.

I am Dr Sing Kong Yuen. From your images, your dog has inflamed joints and genital area. It is possible that he is suffering from allergy to some substances in the environment e.g. contact with grass, dust mites, shampoos, floor cleaning chemicals, dog treats, food given by family members, dog perfumes and many other allergens.

1. There is a blood test for many allergens available for the dog. Pl let me know if you are interested.

2. Pl bring the dog for review of skin, blood test and an anti-allergic injection.


3. Pl contact me at 6253 3326 to discuss further as it is not possible to diagnose skin problems via email images in many skin disease cases.

4. Not all skin diseases can be cured with Z/D or equivalent prescription diet if there are more than one causes other than food. The cure depends on the cause or causes which are varied and sometimes hard to define.

Updates will be at this webpage:
http://www.asiahomes.com/petshotline/20130218joint_paw_genital_itchiness_toapayohvets.htm

 
More info at: Dogs or Cats
To make an appointment:
e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com
tel: +65 9668-6469, 6254-3326
tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)Toa Payoh Vets
Clinical Research
Copyright © Asiahomes
All rights reserved. Revised: February 18, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets


 

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Squamous cell carcinoma in a dog

1.  Hook
Video - 3rd day of surgery - going home. Dog looks forward to going home. 
What happened?



Be Kind To Pets info


2.  Introduction

Image of amputated dog.  Seen 2 vets. Vet 1 diagnosed cancer. Went to Vet 2 who X-rayed the lower leg skin tumour

Insert  X-Ray

and took skin biopsy to send to the lab for analysis. Lab confirmed squamous cell carcinoma of the skin.

Insert "Squamous cell carcinoma"

However Vet 2's operating theatre facilities not functional, so phoned me and surgery was done on Feb 15, 2013

3. Middle

Treatment - Amputation
- Chemotherapy not advised as it is not beneficial to the dog




4. Conclusion

4.1. What is the survival time? the owner asked.
Depends on: spread or not. If not spread, good chances of not recurring.

4.2  Nursing at home. Pain killers, antibiotics and confinement to a crate for 14 days
Video dog going home.






5. Tips & Advices

5.1  Small skin growths in the older dog especially should be removed by your vet early.
5.2  Small skin growths that do NOT heal at all may be cancerous.
5.3  Black pigmented skin growths may be squamous cell carcinomas. Cancerous. Best to get them removed when they are small. 


6. Be Kind To Pets & credits

1292. Toilet training an older poodle again

On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 1:20 PM, f@yahoo.com.sg> wrote:
Hi, I need your advice.
I have a toy poodle, she is spayed and can pee on tray 100%. But when she was 3 years old, I brought home a mini poodle puppy.
Since then she refuse to pee on the same tray. I put another tray in another room, she pee on the new tray some times. And rest of the times, she pee on the floor around the tray that the new dog pee.
I cant grab her to put her on the tray as she is very aggressive, and growl and bite.
I have tried to give her more attention, and also tried to beat her, but she just get worse
What should I do?
Thanks first
 
 
EMAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED FEB 17, 2013
 
Hi
Thank you for your email. It is not easy to give advice in your situation of two poodles competing for your attention. Have you tried "positive reinforcement" method of treats and praises for performance? Or the clicker method?

1. Spend time with the old poodle.
2. When she pees on the tray, give her treats and/or praises or bring her for exerciseThis depends which motivates her.
3. Use the old tray which has her urine smell. What happened to it?
4. Neutralise the urine smell on the floor.
5. Confine to small area again as in puppy toilet training.
6. Spay her if relevant.
7. Many weeks and months of positive reinforcement training may be needed to change the behaviour as the dog is an adult and not a puppy with ease of training.
8. Ensure she has no urinary tract infection - check with your vet. Urine test.
9. There may be a need to separate both poodles for some time and to wash your hands when you handle the younger poodle before handling the older one.
10. Pee trays may NEED to be washed frequently if your old poodle is a cleanliness freak and this may be one reason she will not pee on the pee pan but outside the perimeter..
11. Use the commercial pee pads to absorb the urine as a different approach and trial?

The above are some of my suggestions and I don't know whether they will work. Best wishes.


Saturday, February 16, 2013

1291. The fat dwarf hamster loves the sand bowl


tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)TOA PAYOH VETS
toapayohvets.com

Date:   17 February, 2013  
 
Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs & rabbits
The dwarf hamster has an itchy "eye bag"    
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   17 February, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129
It is rare to get two similar cases in different species. The case of the dog with the left "eye bag" mirrors as recorded in: The snoring old dog had a big eye bag

mirrors the case of the fat hamster who loves the sand bowl. She is one year old, female but weighed 68 g before surgery for a swollen lower eye area, much like an "eye bag" of the older person or the above-mentioned dog.Some 3 days ago, two sisters brought in this grey dwarf hamster. The elder sister dressed smartly like one of those models and so created a favourable first impression. "The younger sister is the one who loves her," said the mother today, Saturday 4 pm as she came to bring the hamster home. The younger sister came 2 days ago with the mother but since they did not know how to clear the eye of more yellow white particles of sand, the hamster was warded. I thought the mum how to do it today as the eye is still not fully opened. "Too much sand had gone into the eye," I said. "Your hamster sleeps in the sand bath like people going to the spa."
"Sometimes she dozed off inside the sand bath," the mum laughed. "Sometimes she even pooped inside." The hamster had become a couch potato and now seldom went upstairs to a room. "She escaped through the opening in the upper hatch," the mum said. "We found her in the room. After that she would not go upstairs anymore."
"This hamster could be too fat to go upstairs," I think. Yesterday, I saw her trying to go inside the cardboard roll which is the left over after the toilet papers had been used up. Her hind legs were caught outside the roll and she struggled. Fortunately I saw this incident. I snipped open the length of the roll so that she would not be trapped.
ANAESTHESIA Zoletil 3 drops IM. Effective and sufficient sedation for lancing the lower eyelid abscess and draining the pus for a 68-g hamster. No need isoflurane gas top up and no fatality. 
SURGERY
I everted the lower eyelid at the medial canthus and incised with a scalpel. Pus oozed out. More pus from the upper eyelid too. More pus from further inside the lower eyelid to the lateral side. This was similar to the old dog mentioned above. Pus had formed deep inside the eyelids. Bacteria multiplied. The "eye bag formed." The hamster rubbed and rubbed. Redness and swelling. The owners agreed to hospitalisation for me to clear more debris and sand from the eye. The hamster went home 3 days later and the mother was taught how to restrain the hamster and put eye drops. 

Updates will be at this webpage:
http://www.asiahomes.com/petshotline/2013027hamster_eye_bag_toapayohvets.htm
 
More info at: Dogs or Cats
To make an appointment:
e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com
tel: +65 9668-6469, 6254-3326
tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)Toa Payoh Vets
Clinical Research
Copyright © Asiahomes
All rights reserved. Revised: February 17, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets

Friday, February 15, 2013

The old snoring dog has a large eye bag




 
tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)TOA PAYOH VETS
toapayohvets.com

Date:   15 February, 2013  
 
Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs & rabbits
The old snoring dog has one big eye bag. 
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   15 February, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129

Around December 8, 2012, the owner consulted me for a 3rd opinion as the 15-year-old dog with a large left "eye bag" as seen in older people, was snoring the whole night long, disturbing the sleep of the working mother. This dog was most loved much more like a family member and so there was grave concerns when I said that anaesthesia was required as this condition was a surgical condition of pus collecting and forming inside the eyelids.
"Any good medication for this dog?" the mother had medication from the first two vets but the problem of snoring and pus leaking from the upper and lower eyelids of the left eye remained unresolved. It would have been so easy to give some medication but that would not resolve the problem.
I diagnosed the persistent eye problem ad due to several large abscesses below and above the skin of eyelids of the left eye. There was a slight subcutaneous swelling above the upper eyelid but this was not the main problem.
Anaesthesia was most risky in such an old dog and death on the operating table would be highly likely. So the owners wanted some good drugs. This would not cure the problem as lancing the abscesses and excision of the lower eyelid swelling (tumour) would be the best approach. The only approach. But the dog might die on the operating table. So there was an impasse. I suggested blood test to screen the dog's health. It was normal. So sedation with domitor and ketamine at low doses and isoflurane gas by tube were given. I used electro-surgery to excise a 4-cm cut below the lower eyelid and part of the upper eyelid to drain out the voluminous amount of pus. A speedy surgery was done as this dog could die any minute, being so thin and old.
In theory, I should not stitch up the 4-cum cut below the left eye so that any remaining pus and dead cells would drain out. But the dog must go home and not be hospitalised for a few days to get the septic wound clean, I decided to stitch up this large gap after excision of the pus. A video of the dog and the surgery is at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=mFeMDlLJvSo#t=281s

In my follow up a few days later, the mother was most pleased as the dog no longer snored. However 2 months later, on or around Feb 8, 2013, the dog came back again. The dog was snoring and the mother had pressed out thick yellow pus from the lower eyelid skin and conjunctiva with swabs.

"What are the chances of survival under anaesthesia?" the adult son asked me over the phone as his mother was at my surgery wanting a solution to the snoring and now anorexia (loss of appetite).
"50:50", I said.
"That's not good enough," he did not consent to the anaesthesia.
This time, the upper eyelid no longer seeps out pus. Only the inside of the lower eyelid and the skin below it. I could see that the conjunctiva of the lower eyelid was much swollen being impregnated with pus. The mother pressed the lower eyelid and pus oozed out from this conjunctiva and a hole in the medial canthus of the left eye.
"What's the cause?" the son asked me.
"There is a thick band of pus on the left side of the gum, nearer to the nose, as if it had leaked out from inside the nasal septum near the extracted canine tooth area. The pale gum of 2x1 cm near the upper premolar 4 revealed that there could be some pus leaking earlier and removed by the dog's tongue. From my veterinary anatomy knowledge, there was a recurrent "carnaissal tooth abscess". The bacteria lodged inside the nasal sinuses.
"So the vet did not do a good job as all the teeth had been extracted (to drain out the pus) earlier," the son said. It was very difficult to explain to him that not all diseases of carnaissal tooth abscesses can be cured at one treatment. The vet could give some reasons like the resistance of bacteria. What the owner wanted was to get the problem resolved, not a long explanation of likely causes as my young associate vet would communicate if he had handled this case.
There would be more money to be spent and this would be one reason that the owner is unhappy with a need for further treatment. This cannot be helped. I have an 8-year-old car leaking radiator water and had sent for some 5 workshop sessions with new radiator and piping costing me over a few thousand dollars. The car still needs topping up of radiator water every 2-3 weeks now. It is like this dog. It still snored.
Cars can get the parts replaced. Dogs can't get a new nasal sinus or new left eye and surrounding skin area replaced even if the owner has lots of money.
This was the situation I was in. Allegations of veterinary incompetence could be nasty if both parties get heated up. The interest of the dog would then be ignored. Unfortunately, more money must be spent on another surgery to lance the abscess. Anaesthesia could just kill this old dog and surgery which would not guarantee a cure at one treatment. So, what should I do? Pass the case to another vet?

I said to the mother: "Old dogs are like old cars. Many breakdown problems requiring lots of money for repairs and maintenance. There is a need for anaesthesia but at a minimum to reduce the risk of death.

"No drugs would cure this snoring as the pus must be drained off. You can see the sticky pus below the lip at the left side of the mouth at the gum. You press out pus daily from the lower eyelid. Now the dog is not eating anymore. He will die from starvation. So, the only choice is surgical drainage of the pus."

She had Hobson's choice. Two months had passed. One month without snoring. The dog ate. Now, the dog snored and did not eat. She gave her consent for anaesthesia. Dr Daniel assisted me. I gave the dog a dose of 5% isoflurane gas by mask. He was knocked out in a short time as he was in poor health. The judgment of how long and how much isoflurane gas to use is based on observation and experience. It is hard to describe. A snoring dog not eating is the worst type of anaesthetic patient. Surgical anaesthesia in the ideal situation was not possible as the less isoflurane the better on this old companion of the mother. At one stage, the dog woke up and whined as I pressed out the pus from the lower eyelid. Lots of blood and pus. Speedy handwork was essential. A sound knowledge of veterinary anatomy of this facial area, nimbleness and experience were requisites for this operation. After all, what the owner wanted was first and foremost, a dog alive at the end of an operation.   

An IV dextrose saline drip for 30 minutes was given first. The owner wanted the dog home and so there was no time to give more IV drip overnight. I used the dental forceps to break down the gum level at the left upper premolar 4, the gap where the left upper canine tooth had been located, made a 4-cm skin incision in the lower eyelid skin and no more stitching this time, an incision into the swollen lower conjunctiva. Also I made a 1-cm incision into the left forehead swelling above the upper eyelid and thick  pus seeped out. I pressed out as much pus as possible. The mother would do the nursing. The dog went home on Feb 8, 2013. Today is Feb 15, 2013. I will follow up soon as to whether the snoring would still be present. It disappeared for around 4 weeks after the first operation but the owners did not follow up with me when the pus returned, preferring self treatment of expressing the pus from the lower eyelid of the left eye. So the left forehead swelling above the upper eyelid increased in size to 8 cm x.3 cm x 1 cm. That was pus inside when I lanced it.

Regular dental check up early in the dog's life would have prevented this problem of recurring carnaissal tooth abscess with pus spreading to the nasal sinuses and the forehead muscles and under the skin.  A dog needs regular check up but most Singaporean dog owners don't bother even when loose decayed teeth drop out and bad breaths are tolerated.          

Updates will be at this webpage:
http://www.bekindtopets.com/dogs/20130215old_dog_eye_bag_toapayohvets.htm
 
More info at: Dogs or Cats
To make an appointment:
e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com
tel: +65 9668-6469, 6254-3326
tpvets_logo.jpg (2726 bytes)Toa Payoh Vets
Clinical Research
Copyright © Asiahomes
All rights reserved. Revised: February 15, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets