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Pet health and care advices for pet owners and vet students, photography tips, travel stories, advices for young people
Sunday, June 16, 2013
1463. Update on Schauzer's fits and "sudden" death case compared to dengue shock syndrome
1462. Dengue haemorrhagic shock syndrome in Singapore
A 20-year-old Singaporean, Mr Ang Yong Han was the first dengue death in Singapore in 2013 (Straits Times, Home B1, Jun 1, 2013). He died one week after falling ill. Another man died. 8,305 people were infected as at May 31, 2013 for the year.
Signs: fever, headache, muscle or eye pain, vomiting and diarrhoea - see a doctor
Don't take aspirin or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (Nsaids, e.g. Ibuprofen or Synflex) as they make the person more ill. Pannadol is said to be safe.
No drugs to cure. Must drink a lot of isotonic drinks as there is a loss of electrolytes in vomiting and diarrhoea. Patients given fluids intravenously, blood transfusion, plasma and platelet transfusion and pain killers (pannadol). If blood pressure keeps dropping, goes into shock and die.
BLOOD TEST. Virus caused liver and brain inflammation.
Liver inflammation.
Enyzme (AST) Aspartate transaminase levels are 10-40 units/litre of serum. 200-500 units are common in dengue patients. In Mr Ang's case, they were "way off the charts", being 1,000 and then 4,000.
Platelet counts are usually very low. Below a certain level, patient is hospitalised and given platelets. Blood test said to be useful only when the patient has fever for one week.
BRAIN SCAN
Brain inflammation (confused) - brain scan done. Patient complained about stomach pain.
Blood pressure continued falling despite being given strong medication. Due to blood vessels leaking fluid. Blood becomes concentrated and pressure falls.
The PURPLE dengue alert banner is a recent introduction in coloured banners by town councils. It is deployed in areas with HIGH Aedes mosquito populations.
Signs: fever, headache, muscle or eye pain, vomiting and diarrhoea - see a doctor
Don't take aspirin or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (Nsaids, e.g. Ibuprofen or Synflex) as they make the person more ill. Pannadol is said to be safe.
No drugs to cure. Must drink a lot of isotonic drinks as there is a loss of electrolytes in vomiting and diarrhoea. Patients given fluids intravenously, blood transfusion, plasma and platelet transfusion and pain killers (pannadol). If blood pressure keeps dropping, goes into shock and die.
BLOOD TEST. Virus caused liver and brain inflammation.
Liver inflammation.
Enyzme (AST) Aspartate transaminase levels are 10-40 units/litre of serum. 200-500 units are common in dengue patients. In Mr Ang's case, they were "way off the charts", being 1,000 and then 4,000.
Platelet counts are usually very low. Below a certain level, patient is hospitalised and given platelets. Blood test said to be useful only when the patient has fever for one week.
BRAIN SCAN
Brain inflammation (confused) - brain scan done. Patient complained about stomach pain.
Blood pressure continued falling despite being given strong medication. Due to blood vessels leaking fluid. Blood becomes concentrated and pressure falls.
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The PURPLE dengue alert banner is a recent introduction in coloured banners by town councils. It is deployed in areas with HIGH Aedes mosquito populations.
Friday, June 14, 2013
1460. Update: KPI - How long it takes to remove one bladder stone from a poodle?
Friday June 14, 2013
I share my surgical experience with regards to the removal of a bladder stone from an old poodle.
KPI FOR SURGERY
How long it takes to remove one bladder stone from a poodle?
Poodle, 10 years, 4.1 kg 38.2 C. Dog was panting but owner said this was normal behaviour of excitement. Urinated blood yesterday, incontinent and now had abdominal distension.
Had antibiotics for past 7 days. Blood in urine. Dark red cloudy urine. Dog's abdomen distended on arrival. Anti-spasomodic injection and antibiotics enabled dog to pee and on surgery, bladder was empty but swollen with 8 mm wall (normal bladder is around 3 mm)
2 packets of sutures 3/0 absorbable Polysorb, 3/0 nylon for skin
A: Injection of Induction Drugs 2.50 pm
B: Isoflurane gas first given: 2.55 pm
C: Isoflurane gas stopped: 3.39 pm
D: First skin incision: 3.11 pm
E: Completion of skin stitching 3.41 pm
E-D = 30 minutes for a vet with 40 years of experience.
E-A = 51 minutes
C-B = 44 minutes of isoflurane gas + oxygen used.
ANAESTHESIA
1. Domitor + Ketamine 0.1 + 0.11 ml IV in 3 ml of saline
2. Dog intubated 5 minutes after Dom + Ketamine IV. She was intubated a few times but seemed not to be breathing the isoflurane. Barked twice. Eyes blinking. I did not want to waste time to mask and intubate as this is an old dog and every second counts towards her survival rate. I decided to use gas mask which was excellent anaesthesia from 3% maximum for maintenance.
SURGERY
1. I palpated the empty bladder with stone. In female dog, I do not catherise unless necessary.
2. I incised where the bladder was located. Spread out the SC fat, linea alba cut and pop out the empty bladder.
3. I turned the bladder backwards, exposing the dorsal part of the apex.
4. Incised 1 cm. Popped out the stone which would be slightly >1 cm across.
5. My assistant flushed bladder with saline. I squeezed out any remaining debris or crystals, known to be struvites.
6. A urinary catheter passed from inside bladder to outside the vulva to dislodge any stones if present in the urethra.
7. I suture the 8-mm thick submucosa first with a layer of inverting sutures, parallel to incision.
8. At one end, I anchored the artery forceps and proceeded to suture a similar continuous inverting suture layer to the other end from bladder serosa and mucosa. "Suturing is similar to Caesarean section uterus," I said to Dr Daniel. I used 3/0 polysorb sutures and throw 5 knots/tie.
9. "Some vets inject saline into the bladder of the femal dog after suturing to see if there is a leak," I said to Dr Daniel. "I don't do it as the closure is tight with two layers." He took a video.
10. Closure of the linea alba (simple interrupted & continuous overlay).
11. Skin - horizontal mattress x 3 with 3/0 nylon.
12. There was some profuse bleeding post -op. "Probably the bigger artery from the caudal epigastric blood vessel," I said. After bandaging, the bleeding stopped.
POST OP
The dog vomited twice, yellow gastric juice but seemed OK. "Barking non-stop before surgery," I said to the owner who visited. The dog sprang onto him as if she did not have any major op. Still barking non-stop as at 7.35 pm when I recorded this case. Incredible. The owner is advised to give the S/D diet but the dog did not like it. There are still small stones inside the left kidney and S/D may dissolve them. But the dog would not eat the S/D. "Give 10% mixed with home-cooked food and increase daily," I said. "It is important to avoid kidney stone operation!"
An unusual old dog so active 2 hours post op. Compared to the overweight Jack Russell who is drinking lots of water and depressed, lying down 2 days after 10 small bladder stone removal surgery. He would stand up when the owner came.
I share my surgical experience with regards to the removal of a bladder stone from an old poodle.
KPI FOR SURGERY
How long it takes to remove one bladder stone from a poodle?
Poodle, 10 years, 4.1 kg 38.2 C. Dog was panting but owner said this was normal behaviour of excitement. Urinated blood yesterday, incontinent and now had abdominal distension.
Had antibiotics for past 7 days. Blood in urine. Dark red cloudy urine. Dog's abdomen distended on arrival. Anti-spasomodic injection and antibiotics enabled dog to pee and on surgery, bladder was empty but swollen with 8 mm wall (normal bladder is around 3 mm)
2 packets of sutures 3/0 absorbable Polysorb, 3/0 nylon for skin
A: Injection of Induction Drugs 2.50 pm
B: Isoflurane gas first given: 2.55 pm
C: Isoflurane gas stopped: 3.39 pm
D: First skin incision: 3.11 pm
E: Completion of skin stitching 3.41 pm
E-D = 30 minutes for a vet with 40 years of experience.
E-A = 51 minutes
C-B = 44 minutes of isoflurane gas + oxygen used.
ANAESTHESIA
1. Domitor + Ketamine 0.1 + 0.11 ml IV in 3 ml of saline
2. Dog intubated 5 minutes after Dom + Ketamine IV. She was intubated a few times but seemed not to be breathing the isoflurane. Barked twice. Eyes blinking. I did not want to waste time to mask and intubate as this is an old dog and every second counts towards her survival rate. I decided to use gas mask which was excellent anaesthesia from 3% maximum for maintenance.
SURGERY
1. I palpated the empty bladder with stone. In female dog, I do not catherise unless necessary.
2. I incised where the bladder was located. Spread out the SC fat, linea alba cut and pop out the empty bladder.
3. I turned the bladder backwards, exposing the dorsal part of the apex.
4. Incised 1 cm. Popped out the stone which would be slightly >1 cm across.
5. My assistant flushed bladder with saline. I squeezed out any remaining debris or crystals, known to be struvites.
6. A urinary catheter passed from inside bladder to outside the vulva to dislodge any stones if present in the urethra.
7. I suture the 8-mm thick submucosa first with a layer of inverting sutures, parallel to incision.
8. At one end, I anchored the artery forceps and proceeded to suture a similar continuous inverting suture layer to the other end from bladder serosa and mucosa. "Suturing is similar to Caesarean section uterus," I said to Dr Daniel. I used 3/0 polysorb sutures and throw 5 knots/tie.
9. "Some vets inject saline into the bladder of the femal dog after suturing to see if there is a leak," I said to Dr Daniel. "I don't do it as the closure is tight with two layers." He took a video.
10. Closure of the linea alba (simple interrupted & continuous overlay).
11. Skin - horizontal mattress x 3 with 3/0 nylon.
12. There was some profuse bleeding post -op. "Probably the bigger artery from the caudal epigastric blood vessel," I said. After bandaging, the bleeding stopped.
POST OP
The dog vomited twice, yellow gastric juice but seemed OK. "Barking non-stop before surgery," I said to the owner who visited. The dog sprang onto him as if she did not have any major op. Still barking non-stop as at 7.35 pm when I recorded this case. Incredible. The owner is advised to give the S/D diet but the dog did not like it. There are still small stones inside the left kidney and S/D may dissolve them. But the dog would not eat the S/D. "Give 10% mixed with home-cooked food and increase daily," I said. "It is important to avoid kidney stone operation!"
An unusual old dog so active 2 hours post op. Compared to the overweight Jack Russell who is drinking lots of water and depressed, lying down 2 days after 10 small bladder stone removal surgery. He would stand up when the owner came.
1459. Update: Overweight Jack Russell 13 hours after bladder stone surgery
Friday July 14, 2013 9.34 am Toa Payoh Vets
I reviewed the Jack Russell, operated by Dr Daniel yesterday afternoon, 13 hours ago and to ensure he has his medication including pain-killers. He drinks and is OK. The 10 small calcium oxalate stones were so small (2-3 mm across) and were flushed out via the urinary catheter from the penile end. My assistant took some images as he is being trained in digital photography and video graphy to enhance his skills when he seeks another employer later.
It is always good to see an old dog recovering well from surgery as no vet can expect a 100% success in old dog surgeries. Many have health problems as they have no regular medical check ups over the years. Old dogs are like house furniture. The owner does not bother with yearly check ups. After all, human beings don't go for annual health screenings.
Initially I wanted an air contrast X-ray. Dr Daniel, Dr Daniel did not do it as the radiographer wanted to charge an additional $100. 50-100 ml of air would be pumped into the bladder via the catheter. I got the X-ray image cropped as there were small stones in a row seen. According to Dr Daniel's interpretation, the stones were in a row because the bladder had no urine and so had collapsed. Sounds logical to me. "The stones are too big to be sucked out," he said. "In female dogs, the urethra is straight and not bent and an endoscope may be able to suck them out without surgery."
In any case, opening up the bladder would be most economical in dogs and 10 stones were irrigated out. The images will be shown later.
10 small calcium oxalate stones removed from the bladder on Jun 13, 2013
I reviewed the Jack Russell, operated by Dr Daniel yesterday afternoon, 13 hours ago and to ensure he has his medication including pain-killers. He drinks and is OK. The 10 small calcium oxalate stones were so small (2-3 mm across) and were flushed out via the urinary catheter from the penile end. My assistant took some images as he is being trained in digital photography and video graphy to enhance his skills when he seeks another employer later.
It is always good to see an old dog recovering well from surgery as no vet can expect a 100% success in old dog surgeries. Many have health problems as they have no regular medical check ups over the years. Old dogs are like house furniture. The owner does not bother with yearly check ups. After all, human beings don't go for annual health screenings.
Initially I wanted an air contrast X-ray. Dr Daniel, Dr Daniel did not do it as the radiographer wanted to charge an additional $100. 50-100 ml of air would be pumped into the bladder via the catheter. I got the X-ray image cropped as there were small stones in a row seen. According to Dr Daniel's interpretation, the stones were in a row because the bladder had no urine and so had collapsed. Sounds logical to me. "The stones are too big to be sucked out," he said. "In female dogs, the urethra is straight and not bent and an endoscope may be able to suck them out without surgery."
In any case, opening up the bladder would be most economical in dogs and 10 stones were irrigated out. The images will be shown later.
10 small calcium oxalate stones removed from the bladder on Jun 13, 2013
Thursday, June 13, 2013
1458. Skin disease & urinary stone cases
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1456. Two You tube videos - canine i/v placement & cherry eye tucked in
I/V catheter placement in a dog
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt_K1beUZEI
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt_K1beUZEI
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TOA PAYOH VETS toapayohvets.com Date: 13 June, 2013
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