Monday, October 31, 2011

716. Sunday's interesting case. Oct 30, 2011. $600 for a rescue dog with tick fever

ANIMAL ACTIVISM

I got a text message from a young lady caring for a Singapore Rescue Group's stray dog with tick fever diagnosed by Vet 1. According to her, Vet 1 said that the imizole commonly used for treatment of tick fever will be ineffective as this dog had Babesia gibsoni. Imizole is "ineffective" against Babesia gibsoni. The "effective" drugs will be the atovaquone, clindamycine and azithromycin but it will cost $1,000.

The rescue group asked her to top up the bill but she did not have the means to do so. So, she texted me for advice.

Below are some of my replies to her.

It is kind of you to do dog rescue work. There are many financial considerations.

Combination of oral atovaquone, clindamycine and azithromycin by (Vet 1) as said by you, is effective against Babesia gibsoni infections in this dog.

I will not comment further as I don't use these expensive drugs. Success rate depends on follow up, not just one injection. Blood transfusion 1.5 bags at $500/bag and hospitalisation will be more than $600 budget from the Rescue group.

Berenil is cheap but anaphylaxis according to your text. Hb at 5 is low for your affected dog, but you also need to know total RBC.

In conclusion, treatment is not cheap due to prolonged treatment and follow ups.


E-MAIL TO DR SING DATED Oct 29 (2 days ago)

Thank you very much Dr Sing. I am heading out to check on the dog this morning. If the rescue doesn't want to pay for treatment, I think I will bring the dog home to die as she doesn't like the cage...


Thanks again. Will email u soon.

Name given


COMMENTS
The dog was sent home without the expensive treatment or imizole. The lady activist thought that the dog was "alone" at the vet clinic and she would take the dog home to die. Berenil would be available possibly 2 days later.


Coincidentally, I was following up on an English cocker spaniel, 11.5 kg with Babesia gibsoni and ehrlichia tick fever 10 days ago.





She came today for her 2nd imizole injection (0.6 ml SC today, Sunday) 10 days after the first injection (0.5 ml SC). Based on her active normal behaviour and much pinker gums, the first imizole injection had worked. Otherwise she should be dead by now.

So, should Vet 1 have given imizole to that stray dog rather than wait for the cheaper Berenil to be available later? Is imizole totally ineffective against Babesia gibsoni? I related this matter of the stray dog to the cocker spaniel and she was worried that I had not given the correct treatment.

"Will you dog be active and rushing out and have pink gums 10 days after the first injection if imizole was ineffective?" I asked her as I gave the 2nd injection today.







My thoughts are for that stray dog. I had offered to give the imizole injection and help out with supportive therapy but the lady activist was a caregiver only and could not decide as she was not the paymaster.

MORE PICTURES AND UPDATES AT TOA PAYOH VETS WEBPAGE
http://www.sinpets.com/dogs/20111036babesia-gibsoni-treatment-drug-imizole-success-singapore-toapayohvets.htm
____________________________

715. Follow up on puppy's paper training case

The puppy was paper-trained for 2 weeks and then given an extension of the confined area. Dettol was used. However, I need more info about the housing layout etc and the following are my comments:

E-MAIL TO DR SING DATED OCT 30, 2011
A@gmail.com to me

show details 8:22 PM (7 hours ago)

Hi Dr Sing,

It was nice meeting you and Dr Vanessa when I brought my puppy for his 3rd vaccination.

The puppy has been eliminating at the correct place, i.e. the newspaper, for about 2 weeks. We let him out occasionally to a small, confined area and he has no problems going back to the newspaper to pee. However, for the past few days, he has been peeing outside the newspaper a few times even after we washed the floor with Dettol. We took it that he forgot the place the first few times, but today, the newspaper was clean and he still peed outside the newspaper. Once, when he peed on the newspaper, he sat beside the newspaper and looked guilty. Are there any possible reasons to this?

Would appreciate your advise on this matter. Thank you.

Regards,
A




E-MAIL REPLY FROM DR SING DATED OCT 31, 2011

I was surprised to meet you and your mum and thank you for coming to Toa Payoh Vets.

Pl email 3 pictures of his housing layout including where you place his feed and water bowl and his sleeping bed (if any).

1. What is the pH of Dettol? Does it some ammonia urine-smell? This may cause the puppy to use the area as its toilet area and its crate as the clean den (although it has newspapers).

2. Previously, did you use Dettol?
3. Use white vinegar + water at 1 part vinegar to 3 parts water to clean the floor instead of Dettol.
4. It may be best to confine him again.
5. Pictures of the housing and other info as requested are needed.

Best wishes.


UPDATES AT TOA PAYOH VETS WEBPAGE
http://www.sinpets.com/F5/20111023puppy-toilet-training-paper-or-grate-not-both-singapore-toapayohvets.htm

Sunday, October 30, 2011

714. Follow up on dog enucleation case - pterygium and glaucoma case

On Sat, Oct 29, 2011 at 12:14 PM, ...@singnet.com> wrote:

Dear Dr Sing,
Queenie, the 12 year old dog, is doing well. She is eating and running around. Has no problems passing motion and easing herself.
Enclosed are the pictures you asked for. I suppose her stiches come out on the 2nd of Nov (14 days)
Thanks alot
regards




Thanks for pictures. 14 days should be OK to take out stitches. Best wishes.

Friday, October 28, 2011

FURTD, FIV and FeLV in cats

1. Feline upper respiratory tract diseases (FURTD) are usually caused by Feline herpes virus and calicivirus in 90% of the cases in Australia's multi-cat environments. In Singapore, usually stray cats.

Sneezing, pus in both nostrils and eye discharges are the main signs.

2. FIV
Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV)
Transmission is mainly by biting e.g. roaming male cats.
Clinical 4 phases
1. Acute infection - 4-6 weeks, fever, neutropenia, lymphadenopathy
2. Asymptomatic carrier state (FIV Ab positive). Most common. last months or years.
3. Chronic disease. Non-specific signs like chronic stomatitis (possible immunodeficiency cause)
4.Terminal AIDS-phase. Infections and neoplasia.

Few cats go to Phase 3 and 4.
Hard to give prognosis.


Laboratory list is typical as follows:
neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, non-regenerative anaemia (use erythropoietin)
monocyotosis and lymphocytosis
renal azotaemia
ployclonal hyperglobulinaemia

ELISA test kits. detect anti-FIV antibodies

PROGNOSIS
Most cats don't develop FIV-associated disease, prognosis is generally good.
Keep cat inddors. FIV cats isolated in cattery. Good nutrition, proper sanitation and stress reduction.

Routine vaccination with inactivated vaccines

TREATMENT
Supportive treatment. prolonged or repeated antibiotics.
Anti-viral therapy
Erythropoietin

PREVENTION
Vaccine available. Roaming outdoor cat advised.
FIV and FeLV easily destroyed by disinfection and tranmission by fomites is unusual.
Prevent contact FIV+ to FIV-ve cats


regular deworming, clinical monitoring and preventive dental care
spay or neuter


Feline Leukaemia Virus (FeLV)
Mainly an infection of young cats cf. FIV cats older than 6 years usually. Non-specific signs like weight loss, anorexia, fever, depression.

Transmission mainly via saliva, nasal secretions during grooming, sharing of food or water sources.

Three outcomes

1. Transietn infection
2. Latency (sub-clinical)
3. Persistent viraemia.

Lympadenopathy (thymic and multicentric lymphoma most frequency associated with FeLV), ocular signs and anaemia YOUNG cats

Laboratory - non-specific
Anaemia
MOST common abnromality. non-regenrative
Leucoppenia, thrombocytopenia, haemolytic anaemia
Azotaemia (pre-renal or enal)
Hyperbilirubinaemia (pre-hepatic or hepatic)
ALT/AP increses
Proteinuria (secondary glomerulopathies or UTI)
Bacteruia

SPECIFIC TEST
ELISA antigen detection.

Other tests;
IFAT blood smears (antigen in WBC and platelets)
Virus isolation

TREATMENT
Supportive treatment ---- control secondary infections, restore hydration with fluid therapy and nutrition. blood transfusions in anaemic cats, doxycycline for FIA. Lymphoma treated with chemotherapy.

PREVENTION
Avoid exposure by contact.
FeLV is also a non-core vaccine,use in cats at risk e.g. cattery, outdoor, rehoming cats
PCR

712. Update: In 2008, tick fever in a Great Dane

A veterinary-client relationship of trust and respect benefits this Great Dane

"My Great Dane does not eat even his favourite curry chicken rice. He is tired and has pale eyelids for at least 2 days. Is it possible he has tick fever?" Jenny phoned me. "I removed some ticks from him recently."




She was my ex-veterinary nurse some 20 years ago and has at least 20 years of handling dogs and cats in various employment in boarding, veterinary practice, breeding and retail. She started work with animals since she was 18 years old and has hands-on experiences in dog diseases in Singapore.

Jenny continued: "The Great Dane has no appetite and sleeps a lot for the past 2 days. He looks pale in his gums. Can it be tick fever? Can you make a house-call?" the caregiver asked me.

"Jenny, if you think it is tick fever, bring the dog to the Surgery. There is no point making a house-call as it is much easier to treat him in the Surgery." I advised this busy manager of a large pet accessory warehouse retail shop in Pasir Ris.

"Can I come tonight?" the caregiver wanted to clear her administrative and paper work first.
"If you think he has tick fever, do not delay treatment," I needed no explanation that every delay permitted the blood parasites to multiply and destroy the blood cells.

"I will get a pet transport man to bring the dog down to the surgery. If it is the starting of tick fever, come down now to get the dog treated before the blood parasites multiplying in his red blood cells overwhelms and kills him," I advised.

Jenny arrived at 3 pm with an assistant. She is a gentle soft-voiced lady in her forties. I was surprised that her hair was disheveled while multiple frown lines creased her face. The 2.5-year-old male giant canine came down from Jenny's car and sauntered into the Surgery. He had never been sick and therefore had not been to the veterinary surgery for the past 2 years. He was as tall as a 12-year-old child.


Fever of 40.2C was confirmed by taking the rectal temperature. There was moderate pallor of gums and conjunctiva.

Two men carried the giant onto the table. He weighed around 80 kg.


Complete blood count needed. I/V antibiotics and amino acids given. Sent home with the i/v catheter in his vein.
Care-giver wants the dog home to treat herself


Put catheter IV inserted. 3 blood samples to be sent to the laboratory. IV dextrose saline, duphalyte and baytril IV given. Sent home with bottle of 5% dextrose saline and duphalyte on slow IV drip. Dog could still walk home. He looked normal.

Wednesday Aug 20, 2008
Not eating much. Lethargy. No news from caregiver.
Pancytopenia in blood test result - Low red, white blood cells and platelets. Based on laboratory tests, the Great Dane should not be standing and should be bleeding to death. But he could be at the start of the acute stage of Tick Fever and the parasites were just destroying his blood cells. Was there any hope for him?

Thursday Aug 21, 2008 house-call by vet
Phoned caregiver. Not really improved. Still not eating much. I told caregiver I would need to make a house-call to check and give anti-babesiosis injection. What I said was all Greek to the caregiver.


Vet needs to do a house call. The busy caregiver did not update the vet.   
Caregiver cooked liver. She gave a few bags of fluid and lots of multivitamins to the Great Dane for the past 2 days.


"Dog looks normal," his gentleman owner said. "No pallor of tick fever."
The Great Dane remembered the injections and drips at the vet and ran into the safety of his home.





The Great Dane reluctantly said goodbye to me since his caregiver asked him to do it. Given anti-babesia injection on Aug 21, 2008 before I left the Great Dane's residence. He had not recovered fully as at Aug 25, 2008. Jenny was advised to monitor his rectal temperature. She needed to buy a thermometer.
The caregiver was cooking liver. Dog ate when caregiver hand-fed bits of liver. Caregiver showed me that she had bought 0.9% Sodium Chloride from a general practitioner and 5% dextrose bag from somewhere. She would give the solutions by SC. I gave 2.6 ml Imizole SC. Duphalyte x 1 bottle to caregiver. Advised caregiver to come for more vibravet medication on completion of 7 days' course and buy a thermometer.

Friday Aug 22, 2008
Great Dane not really interested in food.
"No time to buy the thermometer," caregiver said.
"Did you check on how much water the Great Dane drink and what is the colour of his urine?" I asked.
"You know, I have been very busy updating price list of goods nowadays," she said. "I also cooked for the dog. I do not have time to monitor how much water he drinks or the colour of his pee!" The cost of goods must increase as there was a surge in food, petrol and other prices in the past week and the caregiver was responsible to get the updates done before the weekend sales. The Great Dane had to fall sick and took up a lot of her time.

"Blood tests for Babesia and Ehrlichia at the AVA would cost $200. Do you want them?" I asked the caregiver. She was hesitant about the costs involved. As I have had given the Great Dane the important treatment for the two types of parasites causing tick fever, I said, "Wait and see".

Tuesday Aug 26, 2008
"Great Dane asked to be bathed today," Jenny phoned me. "I need to come down to your surgery to get the vibravet tablets". Surprisingly the caregiver remembered as she had a lot of paperwork to do and I did expect her to forget about the medication as most owners will do. After all, the Great Dane is now eating and medication had been given for 7 days.

"When did the Great Dane recover?" I asked as I did not pester Jenny since the last call. She said she had some much paper work to do the last time I phoned her. Nowadays, a capable and intelligent hardworking employee does the work of 3 people and work never ends for the good employee.

Jenny said, "On Sunday, the Great Dane was so hungry and wolfed down his food."

"It must be due to Imizole and medication," I forgot to acknowledge caregiver's important role.

"It is due to my extra vitamins and cooking of liver for him." Jenny replied. Sometimes veterinarians look at the cause and effect of drugs rather than the acknowledgement of the care, time spent and love of the caregiver when the case is closed successfully.

Her boss came to the surgery to get vibravet for 10 more days as Jenny was busy updating the pricing of pet products. "Go and buy two thermometers," I said to the boss. "Jenny has been too busy to buy one. The thermometers can help to monitor the fever of your sick dogs." Jenny monitored the fever by feeling whether the belly of the Great Dane was hot to the hand or not. That was not a good way to do it.

Conclusion
It is important for the vet to follow up on suspicious tick fever cases. As there was a relationship of trust and respect, I made a house-call to give the Great Dane the anti-Babesia injection after reviewing his blood panel tests. There was no time to wait for the specific blood tests to confirm the presence of the blood parasites which may or may not be present.

This caregiver was extremely good in the nursing care of the Great Dane and a great asset to her boss. A relationship of trust and respect between the caregiver and the veterinarian is always beneficial to the pet. If there was no such relationship, I doubt I would dare to do the house-call as a follow up on the first treatment.
UPDATES
This case is probably an acute tick fever. Although the blood parasites were not isolated nor was a blood smear done due to financial considerations, the blood test of low blood cells and platelets is suggestive of an acute tick fever. Aggressive treatment is necessary to prevent recurrence of fever. No further treatment was requested by the owner.

As at Sep 10, 2008, the Great Dane was normal. He lived for a few more years and passed away suddenly around 2010.  

Acute Tick Fever in dogs is hard to diagnose as there are no specific signs. Lethargy, fever and loss of appetite may be the only signs. As these are non-specific symptoms, diagnosis of tick fever is often missed.

Blood parasites such as Ehrlichia canis and Babesia canis (protozoa) destroy the white and red blood cells respectively.

Haematolgy. Blood tests can be very useful in aiding the diagnosis of tick fever. In this case, the Great Dane had very low white cell, red cell and platelets. Test for Ehrlichia titres and babesia are available at the AVA (Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority) laboratory. The cost for both is around S$200.00. 5 ml blood in plain tubes is needed. However, the client did not want the blood tests done.
Subclinical Tick Fever (no signs) can exist in the dog for years. Then it becomes Chronic Tick Fever (severe anaemia, bleeding from nose, kidneys and intestines to death). Most cases of tick fever are diagnosed at the chronic stage.




Doxycycline oral tablets and Imizole (imidocarb) injection are drugs of choice for the treatment of tick fever. Avoidance of ticks by using fipronil, permethrin and amitraz are best as there is no known vaccine available.

In this case, financial considerations prevent me from following up to check the elimination of the parasites or any carrier status.



More pictures at:
Toa Payoh Vets
Report at:
http://www.bekindtopets.com/dogs/20080839Great_Dane_Tick_Fever_ToaPayohVets.htm

Thursday, October 27, 2011

711. Perineal haematoma and circum-anal tumour

Thur Oct 27, 2011
Today's cases.
CASE 1,
A Shetland 6-month-old male had a firm lump on the right of the anus. "Perineal hernia?" I thought at first but it was not reduced in size when pushed inwards. No pain. "Suddenly appeared in the last 4 days," the young man said. So, what is it?

SEDATION
Zoletil 50 0.1 ml sedated lasted 5 minutes. No hyperextension of limbs. Isoflurane gas top up. Syringe out serous blood 4 ml. Incise. A capsule-like sac seen. 3/0 nylon stitched cross stitch x 1. Blood test showed no bacterial infection.

CASE 2.
8-year-old male shih Tzu with blood in both ears. After washing, I could see a large wart in left ear and numerous tumours in right ear. "No drugs can cure this dog," I said. "Surgery is required." Ideally ear canal ablation, not just excise the warts and lumps. "Wear an e-collar," I said as the owner did not wish to have the operation on financial considerations. Ringworm generalised and a small circum-anal tumour above anus.

710. Follow up: Acute Tick fever in a young dog that went to a dog park

DRAFT CASE REPORT
DAY 1
Thursday, Oct 20, 2011
English Cocker, Male, 2 years, 11 kg
Dog eating less. Not active. The friend suggested taking the dog to see me.
I saw small ticks all over the body. The dog had been to a dog park in Pasir Ris recently/

Very pale gums. Blood test - low haemogloblin, low RBC and low platelets. Blood smear on Giemsa stain showed Babesia gibsoni. Ehrlichia seen. 0.5 ml Imizole (imidocarb) SC given. Dosage is 0.5 ml/10 kg.

IV dextrose and baytril. Vit K1 2 ml IV. Doxycycline 5mg/kg twice a day for 21 days. 10mg/kg twice a day had been proposed by some vet books but this is 4x the standard dose. Multivitamin paste. Vit K1 tablets (1/4 tab/day).

DAY 2
Friday, Oct 21, 2011
Gums still pale. No appetite. Vit K1 2 ml IV and supportive therapy. However the dog barks loudly when the owner came, exhausting himself. Owner brought his liver treats. He ate one.

Blood test results before Imizole 0.5 ml SC treatment:
Liver profile= Normal
Kidney profile= Normal
Hematology=
*Hemoglobin- 7g/dL  [Normal range: 12-18]
*Red Blood Cells- 2.8 x10^12/L [Normal range: 5.5-8.5]
White Blood Cells- 13.2 x10^9/L [Normal range: 6-17]


*Packed Cell Volume= 0.19 [Normal range: 0.37-0.55]
Platelets= 52 [Normal range: 200-500]


*Nucleated Red Blood Cells seen [Severe demand for RBC to be release from Bone Marrow]
No platelet clump seen
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Blood test results 1 day after Imizole 0.5 ml SC treatment:
Liver profile= Enzymes increased
Kidney profile= Normal
Hematology=
*Hemoglobin- 7g/dL [Normal range: 12-18]
*Red Blood Cells- 2.9 x10^12/L [Normal range: 5.5-8.5]
White Blood Cells- 9.6 x10^9/L [Normal range: 6-17]


Packed Cell Volume= 0.2 [Normal range: 0.37-0.55]
*Platelets= 64 [Normal range: 200-500]

No platelet clump seen but few giant platelets present
-------------------------------------------------------------------
What is the importance of platelets?
a) Numbers:
The platelet count gives a general indication of the clotting ability of the blood. If the number of platelets falls below a certain critical level, spontaneous bleeding may occur. A low platelet count may indicate a problem with platelet production in the bone marrow, or may signal the presence of disease that is causing the platelets to be used up or destroyed.  An increased platelet count often reflects excitement, exertion, or an activated bone marrow. In rare cases, an extremely high platelet count may indicate there is underlying bone marrow cancer.

b) Size:
The size of a platelet is related to its age; young platelets are large and plump, and older platelets are generally smaller. This can be important if the platelet count is low; the presence of large, plump, young platelets in the blood indicates that the bone marrow is functioning well, and is responding to the need for more platelets.

c) Appearance:
 Very rarely, bizarre giant platelets, or abnormal immature platelets may be found, and these may signal the presence of an underlying bone marrow disorder or cancer
[Reference: http://www.fetchdog.com/learn-connect/dog-resource-library/health/diagnostic-tests/Complete-Blood-Count-for-Dogs/D/300600/P/1:5:55:601:6103/I/AR000010025]


DAY 3
Saturday, Oct 22, 2011
4PM
The owner came, her friend and the godfather. 2-hour visit. Loud barks.
At 7 pm, the 3 visitors left. The dog panted, heart beat very fast, as if he had run a sprint. It was bad. Would he die? I should have allowed a 10-minute visit, not 120 minutes!

Connected IV - glucose 100 ml, then dextrose saline with duphalytes 500 ml. Gave lasix IV. Atropine 0.5 ml IM. By the time I went home, it was past 7 pm.

The owner was prohibited from visiting for the next few days. This dog had a keen hearing as he could hear the owner's voice at the reception area some distance away in the back of the Surgery and started barking non-stop for several minutes.

DAY 4
Sunday, Oct 23, 2011
Morning 10 am. Dog felt well. Barking for a while. Smelt food. Not eating. Hand fed A/D canned food and given water and electrolytes.

DAY 5.
Monday, Oct 24, 2011
IV drip. Blood looked reddish unlike bluish blood for past few days. Good news.
Passed normal stools when taken out.
DAY 6.
Tuesday, Oct 25, 2011
Deepavali. Public holiday.
Alert and standing in cage. I am relieved that the gum looks pinker. Blood test at another lab showed normal platelets but still very low Hb and RBC. I phoned owner to take the dog home at 6 pm to be nursed by owner.


DAY 7.
Wednesday, Oct 26, 2011
At home. With iron tablets and good food including egg yolk and liver.

DAY 8.
Thursday, Oct 27, 2011
At home. I phoned the owner at 6.30 pm

"My dog is very active, hungry and thirsty. I found two ticks, a grey one on her body. I put tick powder onto my bed area." One tube Advantix Spot on had been applied on Day 6. Yet he had two ticks stuck in skin. Otherwise appeared normal.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scheduled Appointments

DAY 9
Friday, Oct 28, 2011

DAY 11
Sunday, Oct 30, 2011
Scheduled for next Imizole (imidocarb) injection SC. Babesia and Ehrlichia seen on 2nd blood smear on Day 6. Possibly has anaplasmosis?

DAY 12
Monday, Oct 31, 2011
Urine to be collected by the owner for urinalysis.

Acute tick fever needs regular monitoring till negative blood test results 2 weeks after the previous test but most owners don't have the time to do so.

709. Neoderm for 2 months thins the 6-month-old shetland dog's skin

Oct 27, 2011
SOME INTERESTING CASES

I was on duty today and the young man came with a 5 kg thin Shetland with a big right perineal swelling of 4 days. Firm but not painful. Around 3 cm x 3 cm. So, what was it? A perineal hernia? No, as it cannot be pushed in. A haematoma or abscess? Likely. Zoletil 50 0.1 + 0.4 ml saline ml IV sedated the dog.

No hyperextension and therefore no need atropine unlike the Westie (pus in ears, consulted Vet 1 with no success, owner referred by an old client to me) last week when I gave him the same Zoletil 0.1 ml IV. He had stiff limbs which relaxed when I gave atropine 0.5 ml IM and gave ear irrigation. Pus and debris esp. right ear. No head-shaking 3 days after treatment

"My shetland's skin disease did not get cured," the young man of 20 years with 4 months left of National Service said. "I read in the internet that he may be suffering from demodecosis. The vet scraped his nose skin but found nothing. He gave me a Neodern cream to apply."

Two front paws near the dew claws were bald. I could see thinning of the skin and the tendons and bones below. Other parts of both the front paw look moth-bitten with hairless squares and circles. Both lower elbows ventral surface were bald.

I saw redness in skin below the front paws but not the back paws, took a hair microscopic exam and showed the young man ringworm. The other hairless area did not have ringworm as Neoderm had killed any fungus and also thinned the skin.

"My dog licks away everytime I apply Neoderm," he said of the hairless elbow and armpits.

"How long you had applied?" I asked.
"Two months," he said. I asked him to stop Neoderm as it thins the skin when used too long. Prescribed anti-fungal tablets and wash and review in 2 weeks. Should recover. Demodex unlikely.

I showed Dr Vanessa the effects of Neoderm. "This is the reason I seldom prescribe Neoderm," I said. "The owner uses it for a long time, thinning the skin."

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

708. Script for "skin disease in a dwarf hamster" video to educate pet owners

Skin Diseases In A Dwarf Hamster
Dr Sing Kong Yuen, BVMS (Glasgow), MRCVS
26 October, 2011
toapayohvets.com
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129
THE HOOK - A ROBOROVSKI HAMSTER CAN'T STOP SCRATCHING




The 10-year-old caregiver asks mum many times: "Please go to the vet." Mum has no time. (Show busy Singaporean mum with two jobs at workplace if possible, taking MRT, bus etc)
Bringing Veterinary Knowledge Alive To Vet Students & Pet Owners - Sponsored by
Toa Payoh Vets --- toapayohvets.com
26 October, 2011
INTRODUCTION - hamster bites himself. More self-biting wounds - to treat or not to treat?
If not treated - consequences - cellulitis and death
10-year-old girl is worried.






MIDDLE - Picture of cage and home?
what the mother does, what the vet does, what the vet groomer does? Images show hamster has been clipped short by the groomer. Ready for bathing. How do you bathe a hamster?






HOW TO BATHE A HAMSTER - VIDEO
Will hamster drown? Hamsters are usually given sand-bath (picture of hamster doing a sand bath) by pet owners. But now, he needs a water bath. What to do? How to bathe him? Video "How-to"
POST-BATHING - GOES HOME. Medication, bathing and new bedding. Hygiene of cage.



Check out example at: Oro-nasal fistula in the dog
http://www.youtube.com/user/99pups#p/u/1/5AWHpWYWgy4

CONCLUSION - Pictures of other hamsters with skin diseases to be provided by Dr Sing

Early treatment of skin diseases means
earlier recovery, lower veterinary cost and more peace of mind to your child who cares for the hamster

For more information
please visit: www.toapayohvets.com, +65 9668-6468, 6254-3326, e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com




CREDITS.
Concept by: Dr Sing Kong Yuen

Video and narration by:



NO copyrighted music or audio to be inside this video



BE KIND TO DOGS & CATS --- GET EYE ULCERS TREATED WITHIN 4 HOURS --- IF YOU DON'T WANT THEM TO BE BLIND. More case studies, goto: Cats or Dogs
To make an appointment: e-mail judy@toapayohvets.com
tel: +65 9668-6469, 6254-3326
toapayohvets.com
Be Kind To Pets
Veterinary Education
Project 2010-0129



Webpage at:
http://www.sinpets.com/F6/20111037roborovski-dermatitis-skin-disease-singapore-toapayohvets.htm

707. Producing the educational hamster skin disease video - comments by Dr Sing

Oct 26, 2011
I am producing a video for the AVA Responsible Pet Ownership Roadshow 2011 in Nov 2011 and time is running out. Below is my comment on the production!



Thank you for your two videos. Good hands-on work done on both videos. It is only by doing that one can learn and improve and I am glad you did that. Below are my comments.

GENERAL COMMENTS FOR HAMSTER VIDEO WHICH IS ATTENTION-GETTING

1. Hamster video introduction. Excellent narrative of daughter and mother. It captures the attention of the viewer.

2. Sequence is not correct as your starting scene is that of a hamster with its hair already clipped. Then you show scenes with a hamster with hair. Then, hair clipped, then a hamster with hair. Correct sequence is shown in www.toapayohvets.com front page but I will give you a webpage address when I produce the draft.

3. The point of view is that of the little girl who is worried about her hamster with skin disease. Because she is little, she can't go to the vet by herself. So she need to ask the mother for help.

So, the introduction, middle (at least 5 messages on a hamster's skin diseases) and conclusion will be from the little girl's point of view and her actions. Did she achieve her mission?

If she fails to get her mother to act, the hamster's self biting wounds will become skin infections with pus-producing bacteria (show another hamster with cellulitis from one of my cases). By then, it will be too late.

Why did the mother act? One reason is that the examinations are on-growing. The daughter's worries distract her from studying. So she goes to the vet. "The hamster needs to be hospitalised for 3 days to be treated," I said. "That will be fine, as my daughter is having her examinations!"

The side characters are the mother, the vet (consultation by the mother, diagnosis and treatment) and the groomer (clipping coat, bathing time, bathing).

4. Try NOT to superimpose text onto the character (e.g. onto the labrador's body) as this spoil the enjoyment of viewing of the animal.

This is an example from me:
THE HOOK
A roborovski (with hair)

http://www.kongyuensing.com/cgi/20111083dwarf-hamster-roborovski-scales-dandruff-skin-ulcers-toapayohvets-singapore.jpg

e.g. narrative from little girl. Show hamster moving if you have the video before clipping the hair

http://www.kongyuensing.com/cgi/20111085dwarf-hamster-roborovski-scales-dandruff-skin-ulcers-toapayohvets-singapore.jpg


CONCLUSION. The daughter phones the vet two times after bathing: "When can my hamster come home?" After bathing, on day 4 after hospitalisation, the mother brings the hamster. The 10-year-old girl is very happy.

ADVICES FROM DR SING
1. "Do not use the sharp pelleted litter as bedding," I said. "Use the soft paper type". Show cage with pelleted litter usually used for cats, covering part of the floor. Show cage with paper bedding covering the whole floor.

"But the other vet said that it is best not to change the bedding as it will stress out the hamster!"

"No two vets offer the same advices," I said. "In this case, the active roborovski hamster's body could have been scratched by the sharp ends of those pellets and bacterial infection of the skin causes itchiness and scratching!"

2. "Keep the cage floor clean," I advised.

Generally, the story must flow smoothly with actions preferred. The "clock" scene needs to be removed as it does not help since the timing is still 12 o'clock every time you flash this scene. No time movement!

FOR THE EAR IRRIGATION VIDEO

1. Do not superimpose text onto the body of the dog as it makes it less enjoyable to view the video.

2. Repetition of same scene. I note that ear scoping scene has been shown twice.

3. The video needs a hook which I spoke to you about. An action of the dog intensely scratching.

I have spoken to you earlier about this production.

Keep up the good work.



ADVICES

Try to use similar light text and black background as in the "Attack The Block"
trailer at:
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=attack+the+block+trailer&aq=1&oq=Att

Also adapt some of the stories and sounds but not copy their sounds, the story telling and the hook.

e.g. "Better call the police," the girl said
"You are better off calling the ghost-buster!"

e.g. In this hamster video narrative,you may think of above lines and replace "police" with "groomer" and "ghost-buster" with "vet"