VirtuaVet Year in Review

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VirtuaVet Year in Review

VirtuaVet Provides Original, Inspirational Pet Medical Stories

On September 19, 2009, VirtuaVet went online with original, informative, and most importantly, inspirational pet medical stories.  Doc Truli shares original, inspirational, educational stories about real pets she treats in her animal hospital.  Usually Doc approaches the stories from a philosophical, ethical, and informative point of view.  Guided through these stories by a veterinarian who is in touch with your worries and concerns makes the medical *thing* work better for you and your pet!

“Every day, either a client or a hospital team member says, ‘I never knew that!’ or, ‘I never thought of it that way!’  Knowledge should be shared with as many people as possible.  If I can help animals and give people the confidence and inspiration they need to care for their loved ones and hope for the best in all situations, then I am a happy doctor!” says Doc Truli on the eve of VirtuaVet’s first anniversary.

Over 3,000 People a Week Find Inspiration at VirtuaVet!

The Top Seven Countries Visiting VirtuaVet Are: Continue reading “VirtuaVet Year in Review”

How to Prevent a Dog From Getting to the Cat Litter

We know how much dogs love kitty *snacks* (cat poo). How do you keep the dog out of the cat litter?

How do you keep the dog out of the cat litter?

We know how much dogs love kitty *snacks* (cat poo).

Creep Access to Prevent Your Dog From Eating Cat Poo

For medium to large dogs, the solution is a creep access.  You basically place the cat pan somewhere like a ventilated closet, laundry room, lanai, small room, and set the door open just far enough for the cat’s head to pass through, but too small for the dog.  A chain across the opening that you can remove when you wish to enter the room will suffice.  Or a cat door in the bottom of a door or wall that is just bg enough for the cat to get its head through, but too small for the dog, will work, too.

Creep Access comes from Creep feeding.  On farms, like sheep farms, the ewes like the extra nutritious lamb food and they will greedily et up all the expensive special food that is intended for their babies.  To prevent this gluttony, pens are built around the lamb food with narrow openings for the lambs to slip in the pen and eat, leaving their greedy moms behind.  The lambs can come and go as they please.  This system is called Creep Feeding and inspired Doc Truli to try Creep Access for the cat litter pan.

Special Challenge: Keeping a Tiny Dog Out of the Cat Litter Pan (and Poo)

The challenge comes when your dog is the same size, or smaller than the cat.  Like a stinkin’ greedy, sneaky, adorable Chihuahua.  Your little jacket-wearing, stroller riding, arm hitching darlin’ loves cat poo as much as the neighbor’s gawky Labradoodle.  You are in trouble, my friend.

Doc Truli established a creep situation in an unused closet, with a chain across the opening at human eye level.  The pit bull could not access the pan and seemed bored after a few attempts to test the door.  The Chihuahua, however, relished the sanctity and privacy of the dark, quiet litter pan. Continue reading “How to Prevent a Dog From Getting to the Cat Litter”

Clumping Cat Litter Can Kill a Dog

Thinking someone could not possibly eat enough cat litter to create a blockage, Doc Truli asked for more information.

Fact: Dogs Love to Eat Cat Feces

Dogs love eating cat feces like beer and pizza go together on football Sundays.  There is nothing wrong with your dog is he or she imbibes in the feces snack.  Feces-eating is a culturally normal canine activity.

VirtuaVet does not condone dogs’ feces eating past time.  It is disgusting, bad-smelling, possibly full of parasites, and generally makes dog kisses smell awful.  Plus, if your cat likes the clay or clumping litter, your dog’s nostril linings can become clogged with a light crusted coating of kitty litter:  Looks kind of like peanut bits on top of a chocolate coated ice cream bar.  Only not.

Chihuahua welcomes Doc Truli home,”Hi mommy!  Kiss me! Guess what I did today?”

“Why, my darling pookums Chihuahua, you ate cat crap today.”

“However did you know?”

“You have kitty litter jammed up inside your nostrils, that’s how.  Plus, anyway, I know you, you’re smaller than the cat, so I can’t keep you out of the litter pan.”

“Oh, mommy, you’re so smart!  But somehow you still have a smelly, disgusting cat-poop-eater sleeping next to your pillow every night.”

“*Sigh*,” says Doc Truli.  Chihuahua – 1.  Human – 0.

Bassett Hound Takes the Cat Poop Eating Too Far

An ultrasonographer and a veterinarian with 45 years experience bet Doc Truli that it is not possible for a dog to die from clumping cat litter.

While Doc did not see the dog die, the surgery to save the greedy Bassett Hound’s life was invasive and extensive.

If you’ve lived with a dog and a cat for more than one week, you probably figured out by now that dogs love to eat cat crap.  I mean dookie.  I mean feces.  Bowel movements, turds, sh*t, you-know-what-I-mean.  Dogs believe cat feces snacks will make everything better.  It seems like a religious, cultural endeavor for the dog to seek out the cat crap and eat it lustily.  Kitty logs from the garden under the shrubs, from the cat litter pan, and sometimes, unfortunately, the dog gets carried away!

In the pet emergency room one fateful Friday evening:

“Doc, Fred ate clumping cat litter about 3 days ago, and we have not seen him eat or poop since,” said the Bassett Hound’s parents.

A 4-year-old male neutered 65 pound red and white Bassett Hound stood quietly and moped behind the chair leg in the emergency examination room.

Thinking someone could not possibly eat enough cat litter to create a blockage, Doc Truli asked for more information.

“Any vomiting, strange food, food changes, history of problems, travel outside the area, new treats, missing toys or toy parts,” asked the Doc.  You know, typical questions to narrow down the search for the problem.

“Just the litter.  He ate a lot of it,” said dad.

“Let’s see what x-rays show, and we’ll go from there,” said Doc Truli. (I wish I had this x-ray to show you, but this happened years ago, before I carried a camera everywhere with me.)

Imagine this: dog x-ray.  Head facing left, tail facing right.  Big, tubular white thing through the center of the abdomen.  Sort of facing from mouth to anus.  Big white thing = clumping cat litter hardened to the consistency of cement.  Lots and lots of it.  How shocking!  How disgusting!  Doc Truli could not imagine the motivation it took for this dog to eat that much dry, disgusting cat litter.  Must’ve been some amazing cat poo in there!

Massive Surgery Needed to Remove the Cat Litter Blockage

The only surgery Doc Truli has performed in which more sand-filled impacted intestine was removed was a horse at New Bolton Center that needed surgery to remove a sand impaction. (Horses grazing on inadequate or low-quality forage often ingest too much sand, which accumulates in their system and impacts them horribly.)  This Bassett Hound’s intestine was second fiddle only to a horse’s intestine in size and hardness!

The kitty litter travelled to Fred’s mid-range area, in the extensive curls and folds of the jejunum.  Normally, the jejunum is about 17 feet long and absorbs nutrients as part of the digestive process.  Instead, Fred has 2 solid feet and about 5-6 inches across of tubes of hard sand.  The clumping quality made the litter dry out the walls of the intestine and they stuck firmly to the litter.  There was no way to remove the sand from the intestines.

Instead, the intestines had to be removed from Fred.  Several feet of intestines.  Luckily, a dog, or a person, can survive without many feet of the jejunum.  Once resected, the healthy ends of the intestine were matched together and Fred needed to spend about 2 weeks healing from his misadventure.

So, an ultrasound technician and a veterinarian owe Doc Truli a bet!

Bottom Line: do not allow your dog access to kitty litter!

Next Time on VirtuaVet: Tips to Keep the Dog Out of the Cat Litter!

Cheap Cat Carrier Nearly Kills Cat

The #1 reason pets pass away in airplane cargo is a faulty carrier. Be careful when you buy pet furniture!

Caveat Emptor!  (Buyer Beware!)

Cat and dog toys, clothing, beds, strollers, and carriers are not regulated by the government and industry “watch dogs” like baby equipment is.  You assume if you buy a car seat, a stroller, a crib, or other equipment for a baby, toddler, or child, that it is safe for your child.  The consumer protection safety board, better business bureau, and everybody else keeps watch over these items.  If a stroller is deemed unsafe, it gets recalled.  Remember the baby carrier wraps from months ago that smothered a few kids in their parent’s arms because it was easy to use them the wrong way?  Those hard-to-use items come from the market, and if they have harmed a child, the company is sued and held accountable for the faulty design or construction.

No pet products receive the scrutiny baby and child products undergo.  Be very careful when you buy one of those cute, new puppy strollers.  Ever look at one?  Most strollers for pets look more like doll toys than children’s strollers.  They wiggle and collapse like a toy stroller, too.  Be very careful.

The #1 reason pets pass away in airplane cargo is a faulty carrier.  Sure, brachycephalic (pronounced bray-key-se-fallic), or short-nosed breeds like French Bulldogs, Boston Terriers, and English Bulldogs have been shown to be at greater risk of passing away on an airline flight because they cannot exchange air and breathe as well as other dogs.  But, far and away, the #1 reason a pet suffers an “adverse outcome” on an airplane is because the carrier failed. Continue reading “Cheap Cat Carrier Nearly Kills Cat”

3/4 Boxer, 1/4 APBT Puppies!!!

Now, here are your puppies!

Boxer and American Pit Bull Terrier – Boxer Mix Make 12 Puppies

Mom is a Purebred Boxer. Dad is the 50/50 Boxer/American Pit Bull Terrier from the neighbor’s house.

“We were just about to make the appointment to get her fixed!” said the human in charge of the Boxer Dog.

(How many veterinarians have heard that?)

So Shana, mom Boxer-Dog, had 12 puppies! Twelve! Twelve!

Now, where are they going to find homes for 12 large, hungry puppies in this economy? Maybe 4. Maybe 6 will find good homes. But 12?

(How many times have you seen “surrendered with litter. Too many dogs at home” on the animal shelter paperwork?)

So, enjoy these photos. And take your unspayed female dog to get spayed. Tomorrow morning!

Keep Track of the Puppies at Their First 2-Week Check Up

Transfer the puppies to another well-ventilated holding container to avoid double counting the pups during their 2-week check-up.  All mom dogs and their pups should have their first check up at 1-2 DAYS old, and then at 2-4 weeks, the puppies can start their routine preventative medical care.  Name collars help the family and the vet keep track of who is who in a pile of 12 puppies!

Have a second large ventilated container ready to place the "finished" puppies in at the end of their first puppy check up
Place the pups in the second ventilated container, or you will be double-counting for sure!

These Boxer-American Pit Bull Terrier Puppies were weighed, examined, and received their first prescription-strength liquid deworming medication at this visit.  The dewormer made each puppy stick out his or her tongue for the picture!

Tru Tip: How to Weigh a Puppy

When you go to weigh a neonate pup, you need a small, accurate scale, like a food scale or a postage scale.  A large house scale has too much inherent variability for you to trust the readings from day-to-day.

Preferably, find a scale that weighs in grams, as grams are a tiny unit of measurement.  Your puppies should each gain weight every day.  The first sign of illness in a pup is lack of weight gain. Place a small basket, or box on the scale. Turn the scale on.  Press “zero” if you have to.  This will make the scale think the basket or box is part of the tray on top of the scale.  The readout should register 0.0

Place the puppy in the center of the basket and try to catch the weight when the puppy is still.  Write this weight down!  You will not remember the weight accurately the next day, unless you are special.

boxer mix puppy in a weight basket
Sleeping Puppy = Easy Weigh Job

To read a little more about what the vet checks for at the first puppy visit, See VirtuaVet’s First Puppy Check -Up at 1-2 Days Old.

Doc Truli is curious.  What’s the most puppies you’ve ever seen in a litter?  Doc has seen 18 Golden Retrievers in 1 litter.  The whole town had a “Maddy Puppy” after that!  Post your answers and we’ll see how ridiculous it gets!  (If you have a picture of the brood of puppies, post it, or email it.)

Now, here are your puppies:

brindle boxer mix pup stands on technician's hand and sticks tongue out at the camera
Bleh!
boxer apbt mix pup with white stripe in center of nose
Sleeping Puppy
boxer pit mixed pup with white blaze and paw tips, black eye mask and brown brindle fur
Pick of the Litter
Brindle Boxer Mix Pup with irregular white stripe on nose, black face, sticks red tongue out at the doctor!
Fffpht!
Blue eyes have not changed to brown yet in this 4-week old boxer-pit bull mixed breed puppy
These blue eyes will be brown in the next few days. Awe!

3-Year-Old Maltese Baby Teeth Infected

She drank a cupful of water when she got home after anesthesia, but mom and dad did not give her more water for 30 minutes, to let stomach settle. If Sweetie ate or drank too much right when she got home, she might start vomiting and not stop for hours!

This Maltese Baby Avoided Major Infection

Sweetie, a 3-year-old happy Maltese wiggled her tail and smiled at Doc Truli.

“She’ll need the tartar removed from her molars,” said the Doc.

“Okay,” said Sweetie’s folks.  “We know keeping the teeth healthy will add years to her life.  At three, it’s about time we had her teeth cleaned.”

“Just so you know, we always take full-mouth dental x-rays with every dental cleaning,” said Doc Truli.

“Oh, good!  But why?  She’s so young, why does she need that?”

“You’d be surprised…” said the Doc. Continue reading “3-Year-Old Maltese Baby Teeth Infected”

How to Tell If a Cat Is Dehydrated

In the face of evidence of dehydration most people cannot believe their cat suffers dehydration, usually because the cat drinks so much water!

Cat Dehydration and Drinking Problems

Doc Truli stood over a dehydrated, lethargic, sick-looking seal-point Siamese cat named Archie, who did not possess the willpower to meow.  (Can you see the signs of cat dehydration in Archie’s picture?)

“I think he ate a lizard,” said Archie’s mom.

“That’s normal,” said Doc Truli. “What’s very concerning is the dehydration.”

“My cat is drinking so much, how could he possibly be dehydrated?” said Archie’s mom. Continue reading “How to Tell If a Cat Is Dehydrated”

Emergency First Aid for a Dog-on-Dog Bite Wound

Getting dogs apart without humans getting injured: this is probably the most likely time in your life to get bitten!

How Could Angel’s Family Respond Perfectly to a Dog Bite Attack?

Cocker Spaniel with swollen leg
Cocker Spaniel with swollen leg

When a little Party-Color Cocker Spaniel suffered bite wounds from the neighbor’s dog, her parents did not know how to respond.  The neighbor knew some dog first aid and applied his knowledge as best he could.  No one thought to go to the animal emergency room, even though they lived in a major metropolitan city in the US, 10 minutes from a 24/7 animal e.r.!  Quick thinking and proper urgent care would have allowed Angel to avoid extra pain and heal faster without surgery. Continue reading “Emergency First Aid for a Dog-on-Dog Bite Wound”

4-Year-Old Cocker Spaniel Attacked by Large Dog

American Bulldog defends his yard, rips Cocker Spaniel a few new ones.

Cocker Spaniel Attacked by Neighboring Dog

Angel wagged her stump and looked up trustingly at Doc Truli. Her shaved, soft buff fur on her right front leg opened up in angry red bloody gashes. Her right elbow looked and felt twice as large as the normal left elbow. Angel relished the attention inspire of the obvious pain she must have felt.

This red Party Color Cocker Spaniel's right elbow swelled up to twice the size of the normal left elbow.
Notice the swollen elbow on the right leg (left side of pic).
The swollen right elbow
Note the swelling at the top of the radius, the bite holes penetrated into the elbow joint
Normal, skinny Cocker Spaniel left elbow
The left elbow looks normal and thin
The left shoulder area shaved reveals unexpected bite wound holes on the shoulder area of this Cocker Spaniel
Note the red bite holes on the left shoulder, opposite from the leg that was attacked!

Continue reading “4-Year-Old Cocker Spaniel Attacked by Large Dog”

Adopted Dogs Suffer Needlessly

Your adopted dog should be happy.

Rescued on the Streets of Europe, This Hungarian Sheepdog Had a Rough Life Start

Sugar Bear peered out at Doc Truli from under tight, curly white furry eyebrows.  His gigantic, round curly white furry tail and rear end wedged between a black leather chair and a black wooden side table with a box of white scent-free facial tissues teetering half-way over the gold gilded table edge above his enormous white tight curly furry shoulder blades.

This Kommondor was not taking his examination lightly.  Rescued from the streets of Budapest when he was only a 4 month-old puppy, he had been a grey, wet, matted, filthy, hungry, and suspicious of people.  Abandoned on the streets and kicked and yelled at by people who just wanted to chase him away from piles of food thrown away in the alleys behind their bistros, the puppy learned to distrust everyone.

When she saw him on the street, his (future) mom tried to call him over to her.  Kicked too many times, hungry and cold, he snarled and ran behind a car.  She knew he just needed food and love.  Starting with the food, Sugar Bear sniffed cautiously from behind a car tire.  He snatched the food and gobbled it behind the safety of the car.  For days, his mom visited the alley and brought food until finally, the lonely puppy let her approach and pick him up.

Tens years later, 180 pounds, snowy white curly fur, and immigration to the United States turned Sugar into a mostly trusting soul.

“He won’t bite you,” said his mom.  Hmmm, the start of many fateful examinations…..

Part Early Abuse, Part Misbehavior Continue reading “Adopted Dogs Suffer Needlessly”