Hello everyone,
It was very exciting at the clinic today. I normally do not write my blog on a day-to-day
basis, but rather talk about broader topics. Today is an exception. Be prepared
for a really long yet invigorating post. *sings* Be prepaaaaaaared.
I want to start by saying that through my experiences thus
far in the veterinary field, I have discovered that I thrive on chaos in the clinic. My ideal day is when I never get a
lunch break, my hair is coming out of its pony tail, and my scrubs are covered
in blood, pus, anal gland extract, potassium bromide, snot, slobber, nail
dust, you name it—because it means that I’m busy. Henceforth and forthwith,
this was the perfect day.
The morning started with a few vaccination appointments, and
then it got exciting when a bull terrier came in that had discharge in its eyes,
expelled bright orange urine, and was very lethargic. Dr. Rogers examined the
dog and suspected a tick-borne disease. The orange urine suggested that the
disease affected the liver or kidneys. To determine the disease, Dr. Rogers
took one drop of blood from the dog’s ear and smeared it across a glass slide.
This is called a ‘blood smear.’ Dr. Rogers stained the slide and looked for
parasites under the microscope. He discovered that the red blood cells were
full of the parasite Babesia canis. Under
the microscope, it looked like the red blood cells encapsulated little teardrop
shapes (the parasite). Babesia canis
is a protozoal parasite that infects red cells and can produce hemolytic anemia
when the parasite lyses the red blood cells to complete its life cycle. Transmission
is primarily by the brown dog tick.
Even though Babesia
canis is a relatively rare parasite, this is the second case we have had in
the past two weeks. The disease is severe—the dog can die after three days.
Luckily, the owners of these two dogs were observant enough to bring their dog
to the vet at the onset of symptoms. Because many people here do not have much
money allotted for veterinary care, owners may wait a few days to a week before
bringing their dog to the vet. If these dogs’ owners had waited to “see if the
problem went away by itself,” it would have been too late.
Generally, dogs are stoic. Dogs only outwardly show pain or
discomfort if they are truly in pain. Dogs are pack animals, which means that
they have a distinct place in the pack hierarchy. Consider your own dogs: a dog
may be more submissive to some members of the family than to others, depending
on its perceived rank in the family. For example, Buddy, my 10-year old
cockapoo (half cocker spaniel, half poodle), views my dad as the top dog. He
refuses to look at my dad in the eyes, and obeys every command except for when he
is in a playful mood. When my dad comes home from work, Buddy greats him with
more enthusiasm than when the rest of us come in. Likewise, for the longest
time, if my brother Tony got in Buddy’s face, Buddy would actually growl at
him! Buddy viewed himself at a higher rank than Tony. How does this relate to
how a dog shows pain? When a dog is in a pack, showing pain could mean that he
may decrease in rank. This could lead to him receiving less food and being
picked on by other members of the pack. Thus, dogs try to hide their pain as
much as possible. The bottom line is: if your dog is showing pain, bring it to
the vet, because there is a high probability that something is wrong with your
dog.
Anyway, back to the case at hand. We treated the dog with a
few different medications. We took care of the parasite with an IV injection of
Forray 65, an anti-parasitic, and an IV injection of Mildox, which is the
injectable version of the antibiotic Doxycycline. Because the dog was anemic,
we also gave an IV injection of Vitamin B12, which would help the body produce
more red blood cells. This is why Sookie from True Blood takes Vitamin B12; she allows her vampire boyfriend to
drink her blood. Ew. So Mom, if you ever catch me taking Vitamin B12, please double
check that Jack has not been turned into a vampire. It is for my own good. Kthanksbye.
After the dog had been treated, I kept watch over him the
whole day. He was on IV fluids, so I took him out to use the restroom every
couple of hours. I changed his fluids when he ran through a bag, and I made
sure that nothing was impeding the line. By the end of the night, he was much
brighter and even started barking at the cats. This morning, he even got
aggressive, which is a good sign that his body is recovering. We caught the
parasite in time.
After we treated that dog, we got a call that a leopard
would be coming in. A leopard! Cassie and I were beyond excited. We would have
been lucky enough to see one in the wild (which we had not), but we going to
get to touch one! This was a rare, probably once in a lifetime opportunity, and
we could not believe our luck.
The truck from the Moholoholo Rehabilitation Center rolled
into our driveway. While we were waiting for Dr. Rogers to get the tranquilizer
ready, we heard the leopard’s story from the leader of Moholoholo. Part of what
he does is that he encourages farmers to call him when they see a leopard near
the farm. Leopards will kill farmers’ cattle, and since cattle are valuable,
farmers will shoot leopard on sight. Moholoholo’s goal is to rescue leopard
from the farms. They set up a friendly trap for the leopard and bring the
leopard back to the sanctuary, and Moholoholo pays for all of it. The leopard
will be released back into the wild far from the farm. This is the story of the
leopard which had just arrived. Immediately after they caught the leopard, they
had brought it to Dr. Rogers to examine it for injuries, determine the sex, and
if it was a female, determine whether it was pregnant.
Dr. Rogers darted the leopard. I was standing about two feet
from the box. The Moholoholo leader, impatient and agitated, (unnecessarily)
cried, “Pull out the dart! Pull out the dart!” Foolishly, one of the Moholoholo
helpers reached into the cage and pulled the dart out, causing the very awake
leopard to release one of those characteristic heart-stopping growl/roars. I
thought I would only ever hear that on Animal Planet. It was breathtaking and
almost surreal. I had heard the sound so much on TV that my mind could not
comprehend how it could exist in my reality. The feeling was similar to meeting
a movie star. The leopard turned and swiped at us through the cage and
ferociously barred its teeth. Wow. We had hardly waited three minutes (you are
supposed to wait at least six), when the Moholoholo leader became incredibly
impatient. He reached into the other side of the cage and grabbed the leopard’s
tail, saying, “See, I bet it’s asleep already.” Dr. Rogers protested “Leave it
alone, just leave it alone!” but it was too late. The leopard swiveled around
and growl/roared at us again, swiping through the cage. We had clearly stressed
the animal. The leader complained, “Why is it taking so long to fall asleep,
Pete?” Oh brother.
I may have mentioned this earlier in my posts, but when an
animal is being tranquilized, it is incredibly important to try to minimize
stress. Well shucks, that was not exactly what was happening. There was no need
to be in a rush. The dart did not have to be pulled out immediately. The leopard was not going to fall asleep immediately. When you are working with a
wild animal, you must be cautious. All of us working at Provet just wanted
everyone to calm down.
Right at that minute, a car sped into the driveway. A
crippled woman opened the car door and yelled, “Snake bite! Snake bite!” I
immediately ran to the car, took the limp, seizing dog in my arms, and sped
into the clinic. Dr. Rogers and Janelle abandoned the not-yet-sleepy leopard
and ran inside after me. Everything happened in a blur. Janelle brought out an
IV catheter, fluids, the anti-venom, and a bowl of warm water. Dr. Rogers
inserted the catheter, which was very difficult because the dog was shaking and
the veins were tiny. After he placed the catheter, we immediately started IV
fluids. Because the dog was seizing, I gently restrained the dog on the table
so that no one had to worry about it falling off. The dog was foamy at the
mouth and was struggling to breathe. He had killed snakes in the past, but this
spitting cobra had gotten him this time. The worst thing was that the dog had
been bitten 2 hours before the owners were able to come to the vet, for
whatever reason. Perhaps they had not found the dog when it was bitten or had
trouble gaining access to a car; who knows. All that mattered now was that the
dog was in our care.
Janelle warmed the anti-venom in the water and then handed
it to Dr. Rogers to inject intravenously. Dr. Rogers asked the owners, who had
come into the room at this point, “This dog needs five anti-venom doses and
each costs R1500. Would you like us to continue?” They said yes. Dr. Rogers
injected the first anti-venom doses, but the dog was still struggling to breath
and was seizing. Dr. Rogers decided to put the dog on the anesthesia machine to
relieve the seizing, steady the breathing, and give the dog’s body a chance to
heal from the venom. Venom from the spitting cobra causes neuromuscular damage,
meaning that the dog needed time to regain control of his muscles. Dr. Rogers
injected an anesthetic, then Janelle placed and secured a tube into the trachea
through which oxygen and more anesthetic (Isoflourane) would flow. She inflated
the cuff of the tube to keep the tube secure in the trachea. Otherwise, the dog
could cough it out.
We were about to move the dog onto the table near the
anesthesia machine in the other room when we realized that there was a leopard
lying there. The rest of the Provet team and the Moholoholo team had carried in
the leopard in a carrier while we were busy with the dog. The leader asked,
“Pete, can you just look at this leopard real quick? I have other things to do
today.” If the situation had not been so serious, I would have laughed aloud.
Really?! Dr. Rogers said, “Hold on, let me just stabilize this dog first.” I simply
cannot believe that the Moholoholo leader expected Dr. Rogers to let this dying
dog lay on the table while he checked whether the leopard had a penis or a
vagina. Sometimes people amaze me.
Dr. Rogers ordered that the leopard be moved to the floor
and the dog be placed on the anesthesia table. Then, the leopard could be moved
to the dog’s old table in the outer room. The scene was quite comical as half
the people moved the leopard, taking pictures and sneaking short strokes of its
fur while trying not to drop the animal at the same time, while the other half
moved the quivering dog, its intravenously-attached fluid bag, and all of the
needles, anti-venom bottles, and medications to the anesthetic table. We hooked
up the dog to the anesthesia machine and monitored its heart rate and blood
oxygen concentration.
Now that the dog was stable, we could focus on the leopard.
Dr. Rogers determined that the leopard was female and felt her abdomen for
kittens. He did not feel any, so he decided to do a few x-rays just be sure.
The x-ray machine was in the same room as the anesthesia machine, so we had to
move the leopard back into the anesthesia room with the dog, but on the x-ray
picture. (I must admit that the image of the two animals, both unconscious, on
two different tables in the same room was quite amusing, so I snapped a few
pictures.) The leopard also had several torn pieces of skin from attempting to
free herself from the box. We sprayed these wounds with a disinfectant so that
they could heal without infection.
The x-rays showed that the leopard was not pregnant. Before
we moved the leopard back into her box, we all got to stroke her and take as
many pictures as we wanted. As I said before, this was a lifetime opportunity.
Who knows whether any of would be able to stroke a leopard again? Unlike
cheetahs, which can be tame-ish in captivity and can be stroked while they are
awake, leopards will never be able to be touched while awake.
We moved the leopard back into the box and injected the
antidote to the tranquilizer. The leopard was soon on its way to the Moholoholo
rehabilitation center and we could focus all of our attention on the dog. He
was still in the same condition as when we left him: decent breathing, heart
rate, and blood oxygen content considering his condition. After he had been
under anesthesia for two hours (we began treatment around 2:00 p.m.), we
removed the Isoflourane and just gave him oxygen. When his blood oxygen content
was stable enough, we removed the oxygen as well. We kept the IV fluids running
and put him in a cage with hot water bottles around him. It took him a very
long time to wake up from the anesthesia. Dr. Rogers said that even if he was
awake, he might not have regained the neuromuscular control to move just yet. Cassie
and I left the clinic at 6:00 p.m. and Dr. Rogers stayed at the clinic until
7:00 p.m. Janelle came in two times during the night to check on him. I thought
about our patient all night.
Cassie and I arrived at the clinic this morning with bated
breath. We were so worried that the dog had not made it. When we arrived at the
clinic, we ran into the patient room and saw an alert, yet much subdued patient
gazing up at us. He had lived! We did it! I felt so happy I could dance. This
dog had been at death’s door, and yet we were able to coax him back to the
light. It is moments like these when I realize how much I love veterinary
medicine.
Phew! That was certainly a long post. I hope that you
enjoyed it and learned a little something along the way. I apologize for any
spelling or grammatical errors. I wanted to write everything down and post it
before I forgot it all. I’ll proofread it tomorrow. I also apologize that I
cannot post pictures right now; internet is very expensive here. Until next
time!
Sincerely,
Aria
Aria, you are most certainly having the experience of a lifetime! So cool, you will be an amazing vet I hVe no doubt.
ReplyDeleteKeep the posts coming, even the long ones.
Take care and be safe, but savor every second (as I'm sure you are)
-Chris (Fisher)