Sunday, May 11, 2014

1363. Travel stories - Dubai

May 11, 2014

I was in Dubai from May 8 to 10. This was my 3rd visit to Dubai. Many new changes. The Kinokoniya book shop in Dubai is bigger than the basement floor of the National Library in Victoria Street and around 10 times bigger than the Singapore branch!

Today, May 11, 2014, I am in Athens, Greece now. Some interesting images of Emirates on the flight from Singapore to Dubai, taking 8 hours.

A very successful global airline - Emirates





 











Taxi drivers are probably 100% foreigners.




 
 
 
 
Videoing the Musical Fountain at 6.30 pm



Earning a living at the Musical Fountain, Dubai. Cross-selling products brings in more revenue rather than just depend on photography alone

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

What do do if a cat can't poop?

What to do if a cat can't poop?

An old cat did not eat and could not pass motion for a few days. Rectal enemas were given by the other vet but no stools came out. I gave rectal enemas with no result. X-rays revealed rectum impacted with stools and more faecal lumps in the large intestine, numbering around 15 balls of stools. What to do?

1. Open up the large intestine and take out the balls of faeces.  Then change to a high fibre diet. This was successful in the few cases.
2.  Using a gloved finger and extract the stools in the anaesthesized cat. This was my choice as the cat was fat. 



Saturday, May 3, 2014

VIDEO PRODUCTION FOR NICK. The Aunty's dwarf hamster will not eat. The Aunty's dwarf hamster tilts his head


Many Singaporeans address Chinese women much older than themselves as "Aunties".  These are women usually older than 40 years of age. The senior citizens would dress in  a certain conservative fashion. They would wear short-sleeved blouses and trousers. They are usually more conversant with the dialects or Mandarin. They don't surf the internet to look for hamster vets as they don't use computers.

(WET MARKET SCENES OF AUNTIES IN TRADITIONAL BLOUSE AND SLACKS)

So, I was much surprised to see an "Aunty" who lived quite distant from Toa Payoh, bringing a plump snow white dwarf hamster to Toa Payoh Vets for consultation instead of going to the practice in her neighbourhood. Nowadays, there are over 60 veterinary clinics as in Taipei where it is so convenient to find a vet.

"Mimi, does not want to eat, " Aunty said. "She would scatter the seeds and pellets with her front paws instead of eating them nowadays!"

"Her head is tilting to the left," Aunty pointed to Mimi's left side.

VIDEO OF HEAD TILT

I could see that Mimi loved food as she weighed much more than the average hamster. She was filled up and was as round as a big hen's egg. So why was she not eating? The head tilt would be painful and she would not be able to grasp the seeds properly and eat.

Dr Daniel anaesthesized Mimi, checked that there were no embedded seed fragments in the cheek pouch and irrigated the ears. After 5 days of oral medication, Mimi recovered.


Yesterday on May 2, 2014, this Aunty brought Brownie, a one-year-old male dwarf hamster to consult me saying "He is losing weight day by day, unlike Mimi you treated last week.He weights 38 grams today. Every day, I gave him water by syringe as he would not eat, unlike Mimi who weighed 72 grams when you saw him."

"How's Mimi's head tilting nowadays?" I asked Aunty.
"She is OK now."
"No more head tilting?" I asked.
"None at all. After 5 days of medication, her head is upright and she eats."

This was good news as it is difficult to treat head tilt in hamsters and rabbits as there are many causes.

I weighed Brownie. He was indeed 38 grams. His body looked long as he was very thin. My first diagnosis would be ingrown front teeth and so I opened Brownie's mouth. I saw two upper front teeth growing backwards and upwards hitting the hard palate. The lower front teeth were short and normal in wear.

"He cannot eat because his upper front teeth cannot bite the seeds as they are overgrown and have curled inwards and upwards," I said. "This is the second case as I just treated another hamster with a similar malocclusion problem.  Clipping his teeth will resolve his not eating problem."

VIDEO OF THE FIRST CASE OF HAMSTER WITH INGROWN UPPER TEETH AND SURGERY DONE BY ME

As for Brownier, Dr Daniel anaesthesized him and clipped the teeth and got the action videoed for Aunty.

VIDEO CLIP OF SURGERY

Aunty was delighted to view the clip.

FOLLOW UP THE DAY AFTER SURGERY

Today, a bright blue sunny Saturday morning of May 3, 2014, I phoned Aunty. "Is Brownie eating?" I expected a positive reply.
"Yes, Yes" she said happily. "He ate a small piece of Brocolli. I need to buy something for him to chew. Do you know? He bit me when I tried to clean his belly button!"

"If Brownie can bite, it is good news," I said. "He should be able to crack open the sunflower and melon seeds. Chewing such seeds will be more useful as his teeth can wear down.

"I need to buy him a chewing toy," Aunty said.

Some hamster owners buy mineral blocks or wooden sticks for the hamster to chew upon. In this way, the hamster does not chew on the wired cages, making them rusty.  

VIDEO OF CHEWING BLOCKS AND WOODEN BLOCKS FOR HAMSTERS

A hamster's tooth grows continuously and if it is not worn down by eating hard food, it grows and grows and curves inwards or sideways as this was what had happened to Brownie and the other hamster.

CONCLUSION OF THE CASES
The inward and upward growing of the two front teeth in these two hamsters is an uncommon condition. During the past years and treatment of a few hundred hamster cases at Toa Payoh Vets, these are the first two cases of malocclusion of teeth in dwarf hamsters. Good anaesthesia is essential as the tip of the tongue of the moving hamster may be accidentally cut off if the vet does not use anaesthesia thinking that he or she can just grip the hamster and snip off the ingrown teeth.

These two hamster cases illustrate the diversity of illness and diseases even in the dwarf hamster. They make a day of veterinary medicine filled with surprises and challenges. The vet has to "deliver the goods" to sustain and grow his practice.

REFERRALS
For this Aunty, she told me that her niece had referred her to Toa Payoh Vets as the niece's hamster was treated with a good outcome. So, it was not the internet that brought her here.      










     

Thursday, May 1, 2014

1360. Time is running out - closed pyometra in an old dog

When the vet said that the dog has very low chances of survival on the operating table and the medical costs are high as in this closed pyometra case, it is very difficult to justify paying for a probable anaesthetic death. The owners decided to bring the dog home to die. But there was this 12-year-old boy who cried his heart out. Usually vets don't follow up as the owners had decided but this little boy did love this 14-year-old dog very much and knew the outcome. I phoned the owner the next morning. The dog was still passing bloody vaginal discharge and was inactive. He decided to get her operated and I reduced the surgical costs to give this high anaesthetic risky canine a chance to live. Time is running out on her,

If she survived the anaesthesia and surgery, the little boy would be most happy to get his companion back to health and that was what mattered in this case.  "Don't wait till you have finished work this evening to bring the dog down," I advised the father. "Bring her down now while she still has a fighting chance to live."  Time is running out. Dr Daniel operated, removed a gigantic womb filled with brownish-red pus, about to burst if surgery is delayed.



The little boy was most happy to have his companion back home the next day.

This would surely be how a vet can make a difference if he makes time to follow up before time has run out for a little boy's best friend. Happiness in the boy's face when the dog went home the day after surgery would be hard to describe. "Are you happy now?" I asked him as he sat at the back of the car with this old dog. "Yes," he nodded vigorously. Time was running out but the father's decision to operate and the intensive IV drip and medication given prior to surgery stopped the time running out.    


Thursday, April 24, 2014

1358. An old Miniature Pinscher can't pee

"It is always best to get an X-ray done rather than just unblocking the bladder," I said to Dr Daniel as the owner of the overweight Miniature Doberman Pinscher dribbling urine wanted to save on medical costs and so the dog was warded for 2 days. So today, I got the dog X-rayed. Several big urinary stones obstructed the urethra at the os penis area and many more were in the bladder.

"The bladder is about to rupture," I advised an emergency surgery. "Around 10 stones in the os penis and more than 16 inside the bladder!"

The owner had delayed seeking veterinary treatment for many weeks. Blood tests showed kidney failure, thus explaining the persistence of daily vomiting by the dog.

The owner gave permission for the emergency surgery. The dog survived anaesthesia and surgery done by Dr Daniel. However, he passed away 3 days later.

Chances of survival after surgery are much lower if owners have been dragging their feet in getting their dog treated early by the vet.  


1357. An old Miniature Schnauzer leaks urine soiling his belly



On Good Friday, this 12-year-old, male Miniature Schnauzer came in the morning. A strong urinary smell. "My dog has not been eating for two days," the owner said. I palpated an enlarged bladder half the size of a mango and diagnosed "bladder being blocked." Dr Daniel told me that he did not think for reasons I don't remember. He inserted a catheter and confirmed "urethral blockage." As he did not tape the catheter, it came out.

The next morning, after breakfast, the owners came to check on the dog when I was exercising him. I brought the dog out and he lifted his back left leg to pee. We waited. No urine at all. The young adult son and daughter were much worried. "Go ahead with the surgery," the mum said. The dog was still lethargic owing to being infected with bacteria in his blood stream and urinary system as confirmed by lab analysis of the blood and urine.








It is always highly risky to operate on such an old dog. That is why the young adult children were worried.
I gave him 2 bottles of IV drip, with amino acids, baytril and spasmogesic on the day before surgery to be done by Dr Daniel. To strengthen him.

I got the dog X-rayed using air-contrast to check for bladder wall tumours as well. No tumours.

"There is no need for surgery as the stones are small," Dr Daniel commented.
"It is possible that the stones can be dissolved by dietary management," I said. "But the owner has to be diligent to monitor and get X-rays and urine tests done. Most Singapore dog owners just don't have the time to do monitoring and testing."

During surgery, the stones were small and gritty and 7 were found. The biggest was 4 mm across. The dog stayed for 5 days and went home able to pee freely.    

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

1356. An old pug X in the quarantine had black turbid urine

On Sunday, I received a phone call to treat a 12-year-old pug X in the Sembawang Quarantine.  I asked Dr Daniel to do the house-call but the Quarantine is closed on Sundays.

"Bring along a container to collect the urine," I said to him. Usually, no urine is collected as the vet just gave the antibiotic injection.  He went on Monday and got a bottle of black turbid urine. Black urine indicated a serious infection. 

Today, April 22, 2014, I phoned the Quarantine. "No blood seen in the urine," AVA officer Bong told me. I phoned the owner at 11.45 am to tell her the results of the urine test. She said: "The dog is much more active today, after the injection."

Urine black, turbid
pH 9.0  SG 1.005, Protein 3+, Blood 4+, WBC & RBC >2250, Crystals triple phosphate occasional, bacteria 3+

ADVICES TO OWNER
1. As the dog still has 3 weeks in quarantine, the infections of the bladder may return.
2. S/D diet is recommended if the urinary stones are small, but no X-rays can be done yet as the dog is in quarantine.  S/D diet will not dissolve the stones if they are large and X-rays are needed to confirm.
3. The owner decides to wait and see.  S/D diet does acidify the urine too preventing recurrences to a degree. It is hard for the owner to understand the factors causing triple phosphate or struvite formation including an alkaline pH of 9.0 and bacteria urease.  

UPDATE ON MAY 1, 2014
No more blood in the urine. The dog is active and is in Sembawang Quarantine till the end of April. An X-ray has been advised, to check if there are urinary stones. The owner said she would do it.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

1355. 7 small bladder stones in a 12-year-old Miniature Schnauzer on Good Friday

April 20, 2014

"The stones are so small," Dr Daniel commented from the X-rays taken on April 19, 2014, a Good Friday which was a working day for me. "They can be dissolved using dietary management as in Gatsby who was fed S/D diet and is now OK, without any surgery required." The biggest stone was around 4 mm across. Not the usual big pebbles. 

"Each dog is different," I said. "I have not seen Gatsby's X-rays and any routines and instructions on the on the dietary dissolution of stones must by complied by the owner.  Yesterday, you unblocked the bladder. The urinary catheter came out when the owner's daughter visited. This morning, the parents came. The dog lifted his leg and no urine came out. So, his urethra was blocked again. The parents consented to surgical removal and I had advised on the high anaesthetic risk of dying."   

Yesterday, on April 18, 2014, this 12-year-old male, not neutered Miniature Schnauzer came with a history of not eating for the past two days. "He had never been sick in his life," the wife told me. "He went to Vet 1 for the usual vaccinations, but 2 years ago, he passed blood in the urine. Vet 1 gave me a course of antibiotics, saying that this dog was too old for anaesthesia and if the medication worked, there would be fine. And he had no more blood in the urine since then!"

The dog was lethargic but had no fever. His body smelted strongly of urine. The stench of urine not easily washed off by bathing as he was incontinent. I suspected urinary stones as Schnauzers are prone to this condition. I palpated the bladder. It was as full as an orange. "Is he able to pee normally?" I asked the maid. "No," she shook her head. "Very difficult and urine drops here and there."

Dr Daniel would unblock the bladder. He commented that the bladder would not be obstructed but I said it was. Only urethral catheterisation confirmed my findings. 

Dr Daniel flushed the stones back into the bladder and removed. I noted the surgery took around one hour. The bladder was bright red and inflamed. The bladder wall was 5 mm thick. He stitched the mucosa and the wall.

On April 20, 2014, now, a Sunday, the parents came in at 9.30 am after breakfast. The dog was jumping for joy inside the cage. I showed them a video of the dog peeing freely outside the clinic, plain yellow urine without blood, taken just 10 minutes ago. 

The parents wanted to take an image of the dog active with their handphone for their 26-year-old son studying in England. "Take a video," I advised and got the container of the small urinary stones for the mother to video.

This story has a happy ending but it is not guaranteed as the dog was 12 years old and lethargic.

Blood tests showed high total white cell count and neutrophilia as follows:
Total white cell count 28.5   (normal 6-17)
Neutrophils  95.5 %    (normal 60-70%).
Neutrophil absolute 27.2  (normal 3-12)

Urine tests
pH 9.0, protein 2+, blood 4+, white blood cells 33, red blood cells >2250,crystals triple phosphate +

MY MANAGEMENT OF THIS CASE
1. Fluid therapy 2 bottles of Hartmann and dextrose saline  + amino acids and glucose IV
2. Baytril + Spasomogesic for first day.

3. Fluid therapy during surgery.on 2nd day. The dog was much more alert.
4. X-rays x 3. First X-ray showed stones in os penile urethra. I had a the dog's bladder evacuated of dark red turbid urine and given 20 ml of air to get two better X-rays. The two bigger stones were obviously seen as a guide to the operating surgeon Dr Daniel who took out 7 small stones. 
5. Stones for chemical composition.
6. Dog to be warded for 7 days.
7. Bad teeth with thick crusty tartar should be removed 7 days later.

It is likely that this dog will be OK. Medical dissolution of stones was not realistic as the dog's penile urethra keeps getting obstructed and the dog was incontinent and dysuric. The first vet had not taken any urine tests but just prescribed antibiotics which cured the blood in the urine. It will be good practice to get the urine tested in cases of haematuria but owner economics or the vet's personality might not lead to this practice being done.  

UPDATE ON MAY 1, 2014.
The dog came at Day 14 after stone removal for stitch removal. He is very active. Dental scaling of the thick crusty golden plaques were done by Dr Daniel on this Labour Day (May 1, 2014) afternoon. 2 decayed premolars were removed. Surprising the other teeth were strong and not loose. See the video: "The dog with the golden teeth."

Everybody in the home including the domestic workers were extremely happy with the outcome. No more urine-smelling odour on the belly of this dog now as the dog is no longer incontinent. Urine shot out normally.

A happy ending is not guaranteed if the owner had delayed seeking veterinary treatment as the kidneys could be damaged severely as in the case of "The Miniature Pinscher" with kidney failure due to multiple urinary stones obstructing urine flow for many months.


Friday, April 18, 2014

1353. Youtube videos at www.toapayohvets.com

Nowadays, most case studies are posted as videos as they are more interesting for the viewers. See www.toapayohvets.com for the videos.