INTERESTING CASES - JAN 4-6, 2011
Case 1. Collapse, panting and high fever
on Sunday Jan 2, 2010 like a dog having heat stroke.
Yesterday, Thursday, Jan 6, 2010, I phoned the owner of
the 10-year-old Bull Terrier yesterday to enquire how
was his fever. The dog was sent home yesterday after 4
days of intensive IV treatment and drugs. The owner took
out his phone and played the video clip of his dog
crying continuously for several minutes. "This is a cry
of pain," I said. "Most dogs done whine like that unless
they are in great pain." The owner said: "My dog was not
active for the past 10 days, but I did not think he was
sick."
Now, after 4 days of treatment, the dog could stand and
walk a few seconds. His tongue colour was normal pink. I
asked the owner to bring him home to nurse as I doubted
that the dog would survive the next 7 days due to his
poor blood test results. The dog's blood test showed
septicaemia (high WBC to 39, low platelets to 6,
increase in urea and creatinine and SGPT). 10 days
before coming here, the dog had been boarded at a
friend's laundry place.
The owner was to feed him AD diet and other food
personally and gave him the drips SC and check his
fever. "Spend time with him," I advised as there was not
much time left, in my opinion. "Some owners do nurse the
dog back to health when the dog is at home rather than
being hospitalised," I said.
"He's the same but no fever," the man said when I
phoned. "I force feed him the 4 cans of AD diet and
eggs." That was good news as I expected the dog to be
worse and to have fever returning.
As to the cause of the undulating fever, it could be
bacterial or tick fever. There was no tick found on the
dog and the owner did not know whether it had ticks in
the friend's place. All he knew was that the dog went in
healthy and came back sickly. In the 4 days at Toa Payoh
Vets, his fever returned the next day and receded when
given tolfedine anti-fever. I treated him with different
antibiotics for bacterial infections and tick fever
before sending the dog home as a dog with no fever.
Will wait and see. Blood test showed that he had a bad
bacterial infection and toxic blood due to extremely low
platelet. Without intensive IV drips, he would be dead
within 24 hours. It was a miracle he was alive at all.
Case 2. A Cocker Spaniel came in with 3 days of purging.
"We saw blood in her stools," the couple in their late
30s had boarded the dog at Pasir Ris boarding kennels.
The dog had its yearly vaccination. "Why diarrhoea?" the
owner asked. "The kennel operator had told me and had
asked me if I wanted to send the dog to a vet."
"It is hard to know the cause," I said as the owner
declined blood tests to save cost. "There are many
reasons. The vaccination protects against the serious
viral and bacterial infections." The dog was eating. I
hospitalised it and treated it with IV drips,
antibiotics and anti-diarrhoea IV. Should be OK after 2
days as the intestines get to recover without food
intake irritating their surfaces.
Case 3. A thin 1-year-old female Shih Tzu kept vomiting
for the past 10 days. Yesterday, the owner agreed to
blood tests and X-rays. X-ray showed small white
globular object inside the stomach. Another opaque one
in the bladder. Could this be the cause? This is an
extremely high risk anaesthetic case as the dog was very
thin. So I did not dare to operate as the death was
almost guaranteed. Yet, the dog continued vomiting
daily. She vomited blood. I thought it was pyometra as
there were vulval discharge. Was it kidney disorder?
Will wait for the blood test as the owner agreed finally
to the blood test. |