Had a busy 4 bank holiday nights, with a high but not uncommon good weather case load which was yet again a good example to have pet insurance for dogs cats and rabbits.
Surgically we had a mix of major and simple cases with stitch ups, x-rays and repairs for dog or cat RTA’s or attacked by dogs (quite common), bloats, splenectomys, diaphragmatic hernia repairs (abdominal contents end up in chest cavity, breathing becomes somewhat difficult), pyo-metras (get your bitches spayed and avoid this), eye removals and other surgical cases.
Eyes always turn my stomach when they are hanging out; Eye pop outs happen a lot in the smaller flat faced dogs, a bang on the head and no proper orbit to hold the eye in place…. Splat.
Recovering all the above post op and general medical cases in such as: FUS (blocked bladder cats), fitting dogs, kidney or heart failure cases, haemorrhagic gastro enteritis (bloody shits-pouring out) vomiting and a general mixed medical bag of other medical cases.
There seems to be a spell of fitting dogs going through the area at the moment. Not sure if human nurses have spells where you get a lot of a certain type of medical case in.
In the exotics section we had a head tilt duck belonging to one of the staff who was very sweet, various rabbits another common patient, rats and ferrets.
Finally isolation was occupied just to make sure that there was a long extra walk to trudge during hourly obs checks.
One stray that was uninjured but came in as emaciated was not, he was just hyperactive. Weight did not get a chance to settle on him. He spent the weekend in as none of the rescue kennels collected.
When he came in I put him into a walk in kennel, went back 5mins later to dog ward and as l opened the door this white streak shot past me, stopped for a chat to Wibble and on my “oy you git” looked at me with a catch me smirk and shot up the passage. I cornered him at the connecting door.
Needless to say climbing out of a walk in kennel earned him a place in a smaller inescapable standard hospital kennel and he treated us to the “staffie bull terrier scream” all weekend. This seems to be an inherited trait that certain SBT have, no other dogs do. Think magnified nails on a board with full lung power for hours and it gives you an idea. He wanted out, his fault he could have had space.
A lunatic cat who was a recovering surgical case from yesterday decided last night he felt better and played the game of ‘fling yourself out the door because the human will catch you before the floor’. He also grabbed me nails out (the only way!) when checking the patient next to him so l had to have one hand fending off or tickling him through his kennel door.
I was playing 'squeeze the head' last night whenever l did his stats. Hold head between hands and squeeze gently but firmly. As soon as l stopped he would hassle me for “more more squeeeeeze pleaseee” honestly you would think he was the only patient in the place, a total purr bucket.
On Sunday l was holding a cat and trying to stop him pulling out the vet's eyes as he was in a bad temper when the evening nurse standing chatting mentioned that did l know the cat was peeing. I suddenly realised what the warm wet feeling was. I was soaking my entire tunic had soaked it up like a sponge. Needless to say l went on a dry top hunt.
A splenectomy (tumour ruptures on the spleen) came in on the second night and off the table at about 03:00.
Last night, which was thankfully my last night, we had a bloat dog with splenectomy. This happens quite often as the stomach twists the spleen gets involved and also flips and is unsaveable this does not involve tumours but trauma. He came off the table at about 4am.
On change over the student VN went to triage a dog and came back with a dog who had been retching. One look and l told her to go meet me at prep table while l set up drips as he was another bloat case.
The vet came over stole him for an x-ray which was great because he lifted him onto the x-ray table for me and saved me the hassle of lifting the dog onto anything so l could do his iv lines and take bloods. Rugby playing vet’s have a use l keep telling him that.
At least l was able to avoid the op. After l got fluid lines in and sent the bloods off with the student for running l passed it over to one of the newly arrived vet nurses who gave me a jaundiced “no need to be so happy” look over her mug of tea as l went off to finish patient change over, before running away to my bed.
Tuesday, 14 April 2009
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8 comments:
Oh my gawd, you've had a busy weekend. I spent it up and down to our local hospital as my other half had to go in.
At least I had no trouble with any of our dogs over Easter. Makes a change as it's always the weekends that something seems to happen and it's double payment time!!!
Am off to my vets now to get the girls stitches out and their final check-up.
I saw he had been in. Had to chuckle at the easter egg. You did not say though if he got to at least nibble on it?
Busy weekend then. That gave me a couple of good chuckles, especialy the “staffie bull terrier scream”. It always sounds as though we are torturing someone when we get a screamer in. The looks we get off people and it's no use trying to explain either.
Just got back from the surgery with my lad. His hips have been playing up over the last week, then his ears started over the weekend. As we were in the examination room I found one of his Lymph glands enlarged. Bugger, he's due his monthly oncology check on Thursday so it looks like more chemo is due.
I hope you're having a rest now?
Wow, and you left a comment on my blog saying that *I'd* been busy!
At least my pigs didn't pee on me!!!
Heck! You've earned your corn Vetnurse. Respect to you and your team.
Our cat had a blocked UT 2 weeks ago(crystals forming). Fine now, but she turns her nose up at the Hills C/T sachets! What a look we get, Fussy minx. The other cat scoffs it though - prevention!
Yikes! Think I'm gonna get some pet insurance.
Sorry to hear that Dave, poor old lad has a few problems at the moment.
Dammed if l can really describe the SBT scream it is just memorable.
Hogday ask your vet to get in the Walthams equivalent. They may bitch and moan but just insist.
Often if animals do not like the Hills they like Walthams and vice versa on palatability.
Hills (and l think Walthams as well) do a 100% money back on their products even if part used if that is a help for your unused food.
PCSO l only recommend petplan. There are cheaper policies but you are heading for trouble, especially nowadays.
Yes there is always risks of problems with PP but they are the least problematic.
Also they will do pre-authorise for ops and are about the only policy now that vets will do an excess only on.
Get a for life policy anything less ends when the animal reaches a certain age and make sure that their vaccinations are and stay up to date.
Jo your pigs sounded loads of fun though. Well from an outsider and a non running ragged point of view!
Yeah, eyes are my weakness too. Able to tolerate buckets of claret, but eyes..?
Yuck!
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