PET CORNER
October 5, 2012
Strange things I have seen in my career

One of the most repulsive things I have seen in my practice of veterinary medicine occurred just a few months ago.

Late one evening, I came out on an emergency call. A dog was run over by a car. The client who inadvertently perpetrated the act was devastated, as he is an animal lover and is always preoccupied with the welfare of his pets. This was a stray that the client fed daily and always looked out for her.{{more}}

But as happens to the most careful of us drivers with pets, that night, the animal found itself under the wheel of the vehicle.

On examination of the animal I realized that she was unable to use the right foreleg. I did an x-ray and found no broken or dislocated bones. My concern was that there was serious soft tissue damage, including damage to the nerves of the foreleg as there was no feeling in that limb.

The animal was put on IV fluids and injectable medication. The following day the animal appeared to be doing better and even started eating. My concern that the leg was quite swollen and the animal still had no sensation in the limb.

The following day was a holiday and my daughter was helping me clean the pens and to attend to the hospitalized animals.

I suddenly heard her yelling for me to go and see the patient, because she thought something was terribly wrong with her vision.

I ran in and low and behold what I saw left me spellbound. One half of the leg was missing. The dog had eaten off her leg up to the elbow. There she was wagging her tail as if to say, how brave a dog she was.

Another case I saw was a few years ago when a dog was brought into the clinic with severe abdominal pain. I did an X-Ray and saw what appeared to be a needle in the gut. I decided to do an emergency laparatomy.

When I opened up the dog, I found a needle, but worse, a piece of thread about 18 inches long that had somehow effectively tied together a large portion of the small intestines, caused by the needle entering and exiting the intestines at will on its trajectory towards the anus. My only option in this case was to remove half of the small intestines of the animal. I am pleased to say that the dog is still alive and kicking.

 
Some of the genetic aberrations or deformities that I have seen are:

Puppies born without legs.

Sheep with two heads.

We found a lamb once with what appeared to be the trunk of an elephant where its mouth was supposed to be.

A kid born with all of the intestines outside of the body, still alive.

A puppy with hydrocephalous or the head larger than its body.

Animals born with both male and female genitalia (hermaphrodites).

Once we had a young puppy hospitalized next to a cat for about two weeks. When the puppy was ready to go home, instead of barking, it was making mewing noises similar to the cat.

Relatively recently, I saw some pups that were Bequia poodle (native breed to St Vincent and the Grenadines) crossed with German shepherd. The mother was the “Bequia poodle” weighing about 8 lbs and the father the German Shepherd weighing about 80 lbs. They looked like miniature Shepherds with the ears sticking up; some of them even had the coloration of a German Shepherd. Conception was not by artificial insemination, but rather by the good old fashion method. I would have loved to see how it happened.

For further information, contact: Dr Collin Boyle
Unique Animal Care Co. Ltd.
Tel: 456 4981

Website: www.uniqueanimalcare.com