Wednesday, November 14, 2012

1180. Second operation of the hamster with the right fore paw tumour

This morning, the young man came at 9.44 am to get his hamster operated. I was surprised that the hamster's cheek pouches were bulging with food and he looked much more alive than yesterday (Tuesday Nov 13, 2012 - a public holiday, Deepavali)

The young man had brought the dehydrated and easily tired hamster for surgery. "I had told your mum to quickly bring the hamster to me when the lump regrows," I had sliced off the large tumour on Oct 3, 2012, sparing the hand. "The hamster can hold and grip food after the surgery," the young man said. "But only last week, this growth started and became very big." It was a reddish globe of 8 mm x 8 m. It made the hamster look as if he was wearing a boxing glove. He was much irritated by it as it was painful and inflamed.

I prescribed oral antibiotics and pred yesterday 

Saturday, November 10, 2012

1181. Skin diseases in two adult Westies



Case 1.
"You are so rough," the lady admonished me as I flexed and extended, abducted and adducted  the Westie's left shoulder and other joints of the left fore limb. She expected gentle manipulation.
"If the joints are normal, a vigorous manipulation would not cause any pain," I replied. "See, only the dog was crying when I extended the left fore paw, but had no reaction on the shoulder, elbow joints. Gentle manipulation may not show any problems in the joints."

Today is Saturday Nov 10, 2012. I was at the Surgery at 8.45 am. Phone calls came in at 9 am for appointments for Dr Vanessa and one for Dr Daniel but both were not working today. I caught up with my admin work, checking on associate vets'  cases, data mining, reviewing past medical records and doing a thousand and one things.

Suddenly a lady brought in her 7-year-old male Westie saying the dog had been limping. The dog could put weight on the left fore limb but occasionally lifted it up quite high as I observed him in the waiting room. He wouldl not walk into the consultation room where the lady called. So I came out and opened the door. Slowly he went in.

"The dog's backside is itchy," the lady in her late 30s said. "I sent him to the groomer recently."
"The dog's anal area is black and brown," I expressed the anal sacs and blood with dark brown oil were seen on the tissue paper applied to

"Has your Westie any more infection of the ears and the skin?" I checked the medical records. The Westie was a referral from her friend who was 16 years old when I treated the case and was now 35 years old, according to this lady. So, 19 years had passed for this young girl whose identity I do not know.
Westies are famous for skin diseases and so I reviewed this case of success for my knowledge.   The owner did follow up reviews and the disease was cured

10.33 am Another client with a Pom comes in.

Friday, November 9, 2012

1178. Gum ulcer in the 15-year-old cat

Taught the owner how to "inject" feed pellets into the old cat. She had a gum ulcer and so did not eat. The owner did not know how to use the syringe or pill popper and so the pellets fall out from the mouth. 
Why did the old cat stop eating? Is it because she's 15 years old. At the end of the life span? Vet 1 had been consulted and gave some medication.

"My cat attempts to grip the food, but gave up."
So there would be some problems with the mouth. I opened the mouth. A big swollen lump appears at the gum/tooth junction of the left upper canine. This was extracted. The cat still would not eat. The owner had to syringe feed 3 to 4 times a day again.

I examined the case a few days later. There was an ulcer caused by the long sharp left lower canine, causing a red oval ulcer in the opposing upper area where the canine teeth had been extracted. The periodontal abscess of the left upper canine gum area had shrunk. This was good news.

left lower canine was extracted. A big tumour was seen growing on the spinal area. "This looked like a nasty fast-growing tumour. It is best to send to the lab for testing," I said. The big tumour was excised and the lab results showed a poor differentiated carcinoma.

Yet the cat would not eat and the owner had to go on a business trip. He said to me, "My cat does not have cancer as the test did not show cancer. Yet she is not eating. Do you have any medicine to make her eat?" I asked Dr Daniel if he had said that but he did not say that. A carcinoma of the skin is cancerous.

The cat still had that upper gum ulcer. But the main problem was that he did not use the syringe popper properly. He did not insert it far back to the back of the mouth. So the dry pellet just landed in front of the mouth and the cat just pushed it out. Dr Daniel and Min showed him how to do it. We put the cat on the table, one person opened the mouth and the other popped 5 dry food pellets into the mouth via the popper. The cat swallowed.

Nov 13, 2012 update. The owner said that the cat was eating a bit and was interested in food after Dr Daniel prescribed some tolfedine painkillers.

Later,

1177. Follow up on Ascites in the Pom

Today Friday Nov 9, 2012.

I reviewed the case handled by Dr Vanessa. She had aspirated some at 1 bdominal fluid yesterday and again today and the abdomen was not so tense. The dog ate a little.

"There appeared to be a large abdominnal tumour," I believed it could be a malignant metastasis from the breast tumours excised by Vet 1 earlier. In any case, the dog had a very high total white cell count, indicating a blood spreading bacterial infection. The dog was sent home with medication and given a poor prognosis.

"The tumour may be inoperable," I advised no surgery as the dog was in very poor health and would likely die on the operating table. No dog owner would forget the death as it would be emotional and costly. Therefore, I asked for the dog to be sent home today for observation. The cause of the ascites could be the heart disease.

Further X-rays and tests are needed but this would be too costly. The vet must understand the cost and the chances of survival before undertaking surgery. Inoperable tumours and poor health and heart disease are best not operated.   


In conclusion, I wonder whether it would have been kinder for the female dog if she had been spayed at a young age as breast tumours are less likely to develop during her senior years. Vet 1 did not send the tumours for histopathology based on economic reasons.  

1176. Three-year-old cat vomits and can't poop

X-rays show hair balls. Kitchen floor tile renovation recently. Cat grooms excessively and may have got hair ball obstruction. X-rays show the hair balls. Likes to play with ribbons too.

Laxative and enema 2 times - stools come out.


Thursday, November 8, 2012

1175. Hard swollen abdomen in an old Pom - Ascites

X-ray of a hard swollen abdomen present for the past 4 weeks.
Dog was spayed in July 2012 by Vet 1. Inguinal hernia repaired and mammary tumours were excised by him.
The old Pom still had a hard swollen abdomen.

Owner said the 9-year-old dog was coughing a lot after operation and passed a lot of urine but was otherwise normal. 
Aspirated >200 ml of blood-tinged yellow gelatinous fluid from abdomen.

Vet 1 gave a better medical history than the owner. Ascites was confirmed by aspiration. X-ray showed radio-dense lump like a big abdominal tumour. Aspiration is important. There may still be a big tumour. Liver tumour? But liver enzymes are normal. 



Wednesday, November 7, 2012

1174. 15-year-old cat not eating

This 15-year-old cat would greet the owner when he comes home. Meow. She used to grumble a lot on the way home, inside the car, when she was being taken home from the boarding cattery during her younger days in Australia.

For the past month, she just would not eat. Syringe feeding 3x/day on A/D. Seen Vet 1. Saw me. Still would not eat.