Tuesday, May 28, 2013

1434. Two cases of undescended testicular tumours in old dogs.


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

Date:   28 May, 2013  
 
Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles & rabbits
High anaesthetic risks in surgery  of undescended testicular tumours in old dogs
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   28 May, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129

1434. Two cases of undescended testicular tumours in old dogs

May 27, 2013

Case 1. 
Anaesthetic risks are very high when an old dog is operated and all vets will have encountered deaths on the operating table. This case was one of them.

A woman adopted a bigger Papillion cross-bred that has a left undescended testicle larger than the biggest hen's egg you will ever see in a supermarket. That was some weeks ago when she asked me to examine the dog and to age  him. I estimated the age to be over 6 years as the teeth were in good condition. She did not want any surgery to remove the large left undescended testicular tumour.  

2 days ago, the lady brought in the dog as there was a few new lumps growing beside this tense skin testicular tumour, irritating the dog causing him to lick it. I warned the owner of the very high risk. The tumour was massive and the cancer cells would have destroyed much of the testicle based on this large size.

"I met his ex-owner who came to me when I was walking the dog a few days ago. The person asked why I was so stupid to adopt a 12-year-old dog but did not acknowledge she was the owner." 

The tumour and the cysts were removed. It was quite a bloody surgery. The dog survived the surgery but passed away probably from heart failure around 12 hours later as her tongue and gums were cyanotic.  The woman was understanding. Dogs over 7 years old are considered high anaesthetic risks and most owners and vets prefer not to operate on such categories of dogs as so much risks and emotions are involved when a dog dies on the operating table.

Case 2.
One day before this case, there was the 13-year-old Shih Tzu with the recurring ringworm in his belly. He had an undescended left testicle 3 x larger than the descended one and is much firmer. The dog came in for the generalised ringworm in April and had recovered in her face, legs and body. But the belly was itchy and red rings appeared. It was a new case of ringworm again.
   
Left undescended testicular tumour has been removed together with the descended right normal testicle in this 13-year-old Shih Tzu

"Why didn't you tell me that my dog had testicular tumour the last time you saw her for ringworm?" the woman in her 50s asked me.

She had brought in the dog for an itchy body which did not respond to anti-ringworm drugs prescribed by two vets consulted and by her self-treatment of over-the-counter lotion.

 "At that time, the undescended tumour was not so big and hard," I advised neutering. This was done under general anaesthesia with little bleeding unlike case 1. The tumour had not grown fast and large yet. The dog is of a similar age as Case 1 but survived the anaesthesia and is well as at today (3 days after surgery). 
Conclusion
Annual health examination of your older male dog by your vet will have been best if you don't want him neutered. It is best to neuter dogs with undescended testicles as there is a high probability of them becoming cancerous. Although anaesthesia is safe nowadays, old dogs are always a high anaesthetic risk.   

Updates will be on this webpage:
http://www.sinpets.com/F6/20130528
undescended_testicular_tumours_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: May 28, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets

Monday, May 27, 2013

1433. Owner Education: Recurring ringworm on belly area

Sunday May 26, 2013

The 13-year-old had been to 2 vets. Vet 2 diagnosed ringworm. The owner started self-treatment since the skin disease was not cured. Cream and a blue lotion from over the counter was applied on the skin. Still the dog was itchy. The daughter sought an opinion from me in April 2013. I followed up with the mother and advised review but she did not come.



The mother went overseas for 4 days and came back to see the belly full of reddish rashes and ring-like lesions.

"Generalised ringworm is not easily cured if the environment is still contaminated," I said.
recovered after medication and treatment for generalised ringworm as evident by new hair growth and clear skin.


1432. Vesak Day Friday May 24, 2013 - availability and referrals

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

Date:   27 May, 2013  
 

Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles & rabbits
A Vesak Day's availability and referral
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   27 May, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129

1432. Vesak Day Friday May 24, 2013 - availability and referrals

The first case on this Vesak Day, a public holiday was from a family who wanted to euthanase their thin 14-year-old Miniature Schnauzer. The young lady had phoned me the previous night to make an appointment: "It will be Vesak Day, tomorrow. Not so good to put down my dog." But she came as the dog was not eating. Her vet closed today and so she came to me. Her father said to me: "I had worked in the tyre shop 4 shops away some years ago when the industrial park was set up in 1980." It was especially sad for a little girl of around 6 years old with two side pony tails as she cried loudly when she was not permitted to view the dog after euthanasia. The old dog was on Vetmedin and frusemide medication prescribed regularly by their vet (Vet 1). Most owners don't bother to bring their dogs for reviews and just get the heart medication. Proper dosage and review will prolong the dog's life till end-stage heart failure.
"Why did you go to Vet 1 all these years when you live so far away and there are clinics nearby?" I asked.
"My relatives go there."  

In the last case, there was an emergency Caesarean section as the Chihuahua, mated to a larger Jack Russell X had the first puppy stuck and pulled out by the owner 3 hours ago. I palpated the abdomen and there was another one. No X-ray or ultrasound is necessary as palpation can confirm. This saves costs for the owner.
"Is there another alternative to C-section?" the slim young lady asked me.
"Yes," I said. "An oxytocin injection. Wait and see. However, by delaying C-section, now 3 hours later after the birth of the first pup, the 2nd pup will die if the dam can't push it out! It is up to you to decide."
She decided on the C-section which would cost her around $1,000 as compared to an oxytocin injection. Dr Daniel operated while I assisted. There was only one pup, weighing 150 g. It cried and moved vigorously when the water bag was ruptured by me. This means that it would live. "It is not as big as the first pup," the young lady said.

"The male dog was interested in her and we separated them till the end of her bleeding," she said to me. "Yet she became pregnant."
"In female dogs, the fertile period is towards the end of bleeding," I said. "Unlike in the female person whose fertile period is before menses."
So that was how the female dog got pregnant.
"Why do you come so far for Caesarean section as you are living in Bedok and there are vets nearby?" I asked her.   
"My friend whose poodle you treated recommends you," she said.
As the young lady did not delay further, the pup was not suffocated inside the water bag.

He was crying immediately. So, no problem of survival. I let him suckle the dam for 10 minutes.

TIPS
1.  As the owners were away, I took out the pup and put it in a box instead of leaving it alone with the dam. The dam may bite it since she is a first-time mum and the owners will be most unhappy. I would not have time to monitor it.

2. Three hours after the birth of the last puppy would be the limit to vigorous survival (cries immediately on delivery) generally. If there is a delay of more than 5 hours, the pup will not be vigorous as fluid from the water bag clogs up the lungs. Such pups will need swinging (see other video of Toa Payoh Vets) to revive, not just hope for the best as they will die if not swung. Vets need to be the surgeon and the midwife when pups are distressed!



 


These two cases illustrate that referrals are most important in veterinary practice. So is being available when your services are required. It is difficult for vets to be available during public holidays but these are the days when owners need the services.
Angkor Wat kids, Cambodia. Bags of used canned drinks. Toa Payoh VetsUpdate will be on this webpage:
www.sinpets.com/F6/20130527referrals_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: May 27, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets

Friday, May 24, 2013

1431. Mum's ferocious anorexic cat

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

Date:   24 May, 2013  
 
Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles & rabbits
Mum's ferocious anorexic cat
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   24 May, 2013  
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129

Thursday, May 23, 2013

1431. Mum's ferocious anorexic cat

I asked the daughter to sms me regarding the progress of her mum's cat as this was a ferocious cat that would not eat when hospitalised for the past 3 days. When he came in, he was quiet and I gave him an antibiotic injection as he had yellow nasal discharge. I warded him since the mum said that her cat had not been eating for some weeks. The mum had asked for some medicine 7 days ago, but the cat still would not eat. So I advised her to send the cat in for detailed examination including blood test and X-rays where relevant.

After my first injection, the cat would attack any staff going near him. So my new vet assistant could not give him medication. How to solve this problem? "Mix the powdered medication with brown sugar and smear on his body," I said to my assistant.

After 3 days, I phoned the daughter to take the cat home as the cat would be happier at home, be given antibiotics and recover. She was to let me know by phone but I did not expect any feedback as most owners don't do it if the pet is recovering.

I got her SMS yesterday.

 
3.40 pm May 23, 2013
Hi Dr Sing. Gd afternoon. XXX from stc (Singapore Turf  Club) here. Updating you on d progress of YYY, my mum's cat. He is getting better, active n started eating whiskas (can food) not d ones fm ur clinic. She also can meow now. Thanks lots,
9.12pm May 23, 2013
I SMS back, short and sharp as I don't do long texting.
Thanks for good news. He recovered from nose discharge?
10.56pm May 23, 2013
She SMS back
Yes recovered. Tq Dr Sing

Not a spoken word with the younger Singaporean clientele nowadays.
But there was a happy clinical outcome and that was what matters. Vets have to deliver, to perform too, not only salespersons.

A ferocious cat is a good experience for Dr Daniel and my new assistant to handle. I asked Dr Daniel to take blood for testing and give the drip. This was mission impossible if you see this ferocious cat pawing anyone going near him!  This is the reality of practice.

In the University, the professors teach how to diagnose. But now how to treat a clawing ferocious anorexic feline that would die if he continues not to eat?

"Sedate him lightly, take the blood for testing and give a SC antibiotic drip,"  I said to Dr Daniel.  This was done. Blood test showed a high total white cell count and this was indicative of bacterial infection. The daughter was satisfied with this evidence-based medicine being practised.

The next day, I sent the cat home on medication as I felt he would do better at home ground. My intuition was spot on when the cat started eating and meowing, he is on the way to recovery.

Update will be on this webpage:
www.sinpets.com/F6/20130524ferocious_anorexic_cat.htm

More case studies 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: May 24, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets

Thursday, May 23, 2013

1430. Update: The young lady with a Terrier X with multiple bladder stones

Thur May 23, 2013  Toa Payoh Library 2.30 pm

I believe that the Terrier X was operated on Sunday,4 days ago by Dr Daniel and I. Thousands of stones. Millions if you count those peed out over the past 9 years!

http://www.kongyuensing.com/cgi/20130555Terrier_F_9years_bladder_full_stones.jpg

http://www.kongyuensing.com/cgi/20130522bladder_stones_female_terrier_toapayohvets.jpg

This morning, 9.49 am,  I phoned the lady owner of this Terrier X. No response. Could be sleeping or working. I sms her:
"May 24. Is C eating n normal now? Dr Sing Toa Payoh Vets"

At 12.19 pm, sms reply

"Hi yes she is...:) pee is clear and just passed motion today too...so she's recovering really well! Results for the stones will be out on Sun?

2.33 pm I reply:
"Not so soon. Will inform u."

Nowadays, it is better to text or send images of X-rays, lab reports by phone. Not a word needs to be spoken and no time wasting.

1429. Cost of canine bladder stone surgeries in Singapore - 2 case studies from other vets























Breast cancers in dogs

I was operating on some mastectomy cases with Dr Daniel recently. Older unspayed dogs with mammary tumours. It is hard for the owners as anaesthetic risks are high and who would want a dog to die on the operating table? So, the owners generally will not want any surgery when the breast tumours were detected as small nodules as in one case. 7 months later, one tumour had exploded and there was an emotional decision to get the exploding tumour removed.

I am scared of doing such old dog anaesthesias as deaths are always round the corner, due to old age and poor health as well as the presence of spreading breast cancer cells in the old dog's body. Possibly to the lungs. Owing to economic reasons, no lung X-rays are usually done before surgery as heartlanders frequently complain about the high veterinary cost of surgery.  Prices keep going up as evident by the Car's COE prices having shot up today to over $65,000. At its lowest, it was $1.00. So you need another $65,000 on top of your car purchase price. Dr Daniel showed me a video clip of famous US actors e.g. Fast & Furious being asked about the prices of Singapore cars. They underestimated by over 50% when they compared to US car prices.

For heartlanders, it will be much cheaper to get the female dogs spayed when they are young as they seldom get breast cancers in old age. So less expenses and worries. But many don't do it and as a vet, we try to minimise costs but not to the extent of losing money. Young vets don't know how expensive it is to maintain a vet practice with the bureaucrats thinking of ways of adding costs like having to get an autoclave certified for safety every year. Why don't they get those gas cylinder valves in Singapore residences to be certified for safety yearly? There will be much unhappiness as this will add up the costs to the people.  

 

1427. The runaway horse and other stories

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

Date:   23 May, 2013  
 

Focus: Small animals - dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs & rabbits
The horse who got away & other stories  
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
Date:   23 May, 2013 
toapayohvets.com 
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129

1427. Veterinary stories from a young vet

May 23, 2013

Seldom do I meet young vets as we have our own business to attend to and there may be a generation gap. I had some interesting conversations with one young vet I met yesterday.

Case of a female cat has a distended bladder.
It is very hard to catheterise a female dog or cat, unlike a male dog. In the female cat, it is much more difficult. "Use a speculum or otoscope with magnifying glass," I advised this young vet who would have known what to do from internet research. "The dog's legs must hang down the table." she said. "But I can't locate the urethral opening." The dog must be anaesthesized.

She had a case of a female cat with swollen bladder and asked the owner to visit another vet. "There is a possibility that you use a syringe to suck out the urine and whatever is lodged inside the female urethra would be dislodged," I said there was no need to send the patient away. "Make a small incision after aspiration of the urine deflating the bladder. Place the catheter into the urethra from inside the bladder and syringe in the saline to dislodge the urethra or use a forceps to extract it. You can then stitch up the small incision. The same process applies to the female dog with urethra obstruction."

Case of a runaway neutered horse.

IV anaesthetic was used and she was monitoring the horse anaesthesia. "The eyelids were blinking and I asked the operating vet whether I should top up," she was doing internship in Australia and the horse was being neutered in an open field. "No need to," the other vet said. "In a second, the horse got up and ran away!"

"It is very difficult to catch a runaway horse," I remembered my days as a racehorse vet at the Singapore Turf Club. "How did you two do it?"

"The horse was still wobbly and we caught him."

In any horse story, a pregnant vet was standing near a horse and got kicked. She had a miscarriage. "Fortunately she did not die," I said. "I hear stories of vets killed by kicking horses."

I was telling this young vet that I prefer to visit the old vet practices as many of them have excellent veterinary lessons to learn from. Not the fanciful high tech expensive vet practices where money is not a problem.  "There is an old practice in Australia where the vets don't use isoflurane gas, one young vet told me," I said. "It was a fun practice to do internship. The vets were around 70 years old. A James Herriot type of practice. I would like to visit it. At first the vet who told me of its existence did not want to reveal its name and I told her it was a legal practice. So what is there is hide? Her University lecturers frowned at this practice and could not believe it existed in Australia. I guess it is one of a kind."

I went to visit an industrial shop making gold rings and other accessories with this young vet as the operators were her parents. The workers had gone and now the parents were doing the work themselves. The over 50 years of industrial knowledge were not fully passed on as there were no successors as the elder brother is making more money in IT and the younger one is a vet earning $4,000 a month. "How many thousands of gold ring need to be sold to make $4,000," I said to this young vet. "At 3% of selling price of $200 for a gold ring as profit as your mum said, she needs to sell over a thousand rings."
"But she can sell many rings and make more money than me," the young vet knows the inside of the industry as she was a little girl who was brought to the industrial shop by her parents.  The good times might have gone by. Gold prices have dropped but there is always innovation and a new mindset to revive her parents' business. If only she was interested. "Studying TMC is a waste of time if you want to make money," I said. "Apprentice yourself and improve your parents' business bringing it to a higher level," I advised. Only she and her brother would have the insider's knowledge on what ails the industry but has she the motivation?  "Earning $4,000 a month by being an employee has its limits on earning more," I said. "If you can improve your parents' business and expertise, the income will definitely be more than $4,000!"

The prices of making such rings are much cheaper in Malaysia, China and Hong Kong and the workers are nowhere to be found. The founders who are over 60 years old still carry on.  "It is from such hard work that the parents send a princess to study vet medicine in Australia," I said. The second brother who is keen on continuing this business called this young vet a princess of the family. "You ought to help sustain the family business, but with innovations and new ideas," I said.

"Rather than continuing making the usual gold rings or sourcing them. For example, online sales, using an English name. Not a Chinese name like Hong Hong gold as the global consumers prefer English-sounding brands."  The small animal veterinary practices on the other hand had grown to over 50 in number while such gold producing shops had shrunk in numbers in Singapore. Bali is famous for its gold craftsmanship and Singapore is now not competitive at all. Life is full of changes and one can become redundant or bankrupt with global changes in one's industry and government policies. 
Update at: www.sinpets.com/F6/2013023vet_stories_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: May 23, 2013

Toa Payoh Vets




Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Surgical cost of bladder stone removal surgery from two vets in 2 cases.




CASE1. Vet 1 quoted $1850 for removal of above bladder stones. The bladder is packed full. et 2

CASE 2. Vet 2 quoted $1,000 for removal of bladder stones. Both owners want payment by instalments but most times, the instalments don't get paid as the owners forget.

I had one couple who did not pay a cent for the Caesarean section of a Jack Russell some years ago. I did not get a deposit as I trusted them. So, nowadays, it is full payment at some clinics.

1425. New maid for Mrs Robinson

Yesterday, May 20, 2013, I visited Khin Khin's office. Her neighbour whose husband will not tolerate any man talking to her passed by with two tall glasses of water and came in to talk to her. One glass had 3 stalks of roses and the other was a leafed plant. "Don't call her Aunty," Khin Khin said. "Call her Ayi".  I took over the glasses and put them on the table and smelled the roses.

"You don't smell the roses as these are for Buddha," Khin Khin said. "Now you have to pay $5.00 to buy replacement ones." The Ayi did not mind. All Buddhists offer flowers in front of the Buddha picture.   

I noted a thin dark girl sitting quietly in the room. "Mrs Robinson's new maid had arrived," she said. As I was going back to the clinic, I offered to send her to Mrs Robinson's condo in Cairnhill Road, saving Khin Khin some time. "Mrs R is not in," she said to the new maid who had just arrived and carried a back pack and two plastic bags. One plastic bag had a frame of the Buddha. She showed me a photo of her parents. The father is 75 years old and is normal health in mind and body. The mother is 59 years old.

"Why don't you just work in Myanmar and be with your parents?" I asked her. She had worked in Singapore for a family in Bukit Panjang 3 years ago. "I can't save money," she had worked in a hotel in Yangon for around S$150 per month. Here, she would earn $500 with free board and lodging and would have some money to ha.