Bladder Stones

Posted by Aaron

Wednesday, April 29, 2009












Bladder stones are just that. Stones that form in the bladder. The stones are made of different things depending on the condition that produced them. Some are made of calcium in the form of calcium oxalate. Others are known as magnesium ammonium phosphate aka triple phosphate aka struvite stones. There are also urate stones and cysteine stones.


When the components that make up the stones are in high enough concentration in the bladder, they will form crystals. Lots of crystals stick together to form sand and that ultimately grows to be a full sized stone.


Calcium oxalate stones usually form because the body is kicking too much calcium out in the urine. There are some breeds more prone to these stones, namely the bichon.


Struvite stones are nearly ALWAYS associated with infection in the dog. Treat the infection, you solve the crystal problem. I've had ONE patient in 11 years that was a true primary struvite producer. They happen, but they're rare. Cats are more capable of producing struvite stones independent of infection.


Some dalmations have a glitch in their metabolism of a particular amino acid and are prone to producing ammonium biurate (urate) crystals.


Out of all of these types of stones, only one can be dissolved once it's formed and that's the struvite. In the case of the struvite you can actually feed a diet designed to acidify the urine and dilute the concentration, and those guys can dissolve. In all other cases, you can't dissolve it and you must go in surgically to remove them. Surgery is fairly straight forward and involves making an abdominal incision and then one into the bladder to remove the stones. That's what the images above come from. Each picture represents a stone or stones taken out of one dog.


More than 95% of stones should be visible on x-ray. Some stones are invisible to the x-ray by can be seen with ultrasound. Stones must also be large enough to see on x-ray. Smaller stones (bb sized) can't be seen in most bigger dogs. They're just too small to see.


In people, the method most frequently used to treat stones is Extracorporeal Shock Wave Lithotripsy or ESWL. This is pretty cool and involves blasting the target organ/stone with shock waves of sound that pulverize the stone into little bits that are passable. This can be done in dogs and cats but is expensive and not practical. Our pets heal much better than we do from surgery. We're wimps.


Prevention depends entirely on the type of stone. Nine times out of ten we have to change diet to help prevent the urine from becoming too concentrated or too rich in the components necessary to produce a stone. In the case of struvites, we may only have to prevent infection. The most important part of prevention is fairly simple. WATER. These patients need to increase their water intake to help dilute the urine. Some foods help with this. Some foods don't.


It may sound like splitting hairs, but bladder stones aren't the same as kidney stones. My understanding is that people are more likely to develop small stones in the kidneys that then must travel down to the bladder and out. They also hurt like hell. Bladder stones are uncommon and nearly always in men.


Kidney stones are much less common for my patients and if they occur, usually stay in the kidney. Bladder stones, however, are very common and can be in any species, any sex.


People often come in and say that their pet has a history of "kidney stones." They almost always mean bladder stones and I have to ask them to clarify. Like I say - it sounds like splitting hairs, but as you see, it really does represent a big difference between human and veterinary medicine. I also will treat a true kidney stone dog or cat differently than I might a bladder stone dog or cat.


One last thing to be said is regarding the difference between males and females in regards to stones. In the female, the shorter, larger diameter urethra can pass lots of smaller stones. Large stones just stay in the bladder. In the male, large stones don't worry me. Little stones do. If they are small enough to leave the bladder, but large enough that they can't make it through the bone that is within the penis, then they can become lodged in place and obstruct the urethra. Now the patient can't pee and it's an emergency. For this reason, I usually won't recommend that we try to dissolve stones in a male dog, even if they are a type that can be dissolved. The last thing I need is that big stone becoming a little stone and then obstructing the patient. Once they are down the urethra, I have to first get them moved back up into the bladder so I can remove them. It was painful the first time as then went DOWN the urethra. Now I have to double the insult by forcing the things back up the poor urethra. Ouch.


AMH

Cocoa Bean Mulch

Posted by Aaron

Tuesday, April 28, 2009


This e-mail is making the rounds again, so I wanted to make a point about it. The e-mail states that this poor unsuspecting owner purchased a bag of mulch that said on the bag it was only toxic to cats (first flag - why would mulch say only toxic to cats that eat it?) from Target. Their dog then ate a bunch of the mulch and the next day went for her walk and died on the spot. Although the e-mail is bunk, the general facts are semi-accurate.

Yes, cocoa bean hulls are toxic to dogs and cats. No, Target is not the root of all evil (Wal-Mart is). The e-mail talks about how dangerous this stuff is.

Like all parts of the cocoa bean, the hull contains theobromine. Theobromine is a cousin of caffeine. Dogs and cats don't handle caffeine well. They can tolerate small doses, but not much. Humans, on the other hand, can tolerate quite a bit of it.

Cocoa bean mulch is fantastic. It smells great, degrades into a wonderful humus. Just don't let your dog eat it. Don't use it in the yard where they will be unattended because it does taste good to them.

Chocolate intoxication in a dog looks like a non-coffee drinking person that just shotgunned an entire pot of espresso. Some people could survive it, but chances are that they'll land in the hospital with a heart rate that's through the roof and seizures. The symptoms don't take a day to show up. They show up within an hour and only get worse. These guys get REALLY sick in a hurry and will start to act completely wired out of their gourd pretty quickly.

It's the cocoa itself that's toxic. Milk chocolate is therefore less toxic than dark. Dark is less toxic than baker's. Bakers is less toxic than the whole beans. Hulls probably fall into the baker's chocolate range. It takes several large bars of Hershey's milk chocolate to poison a labrador. By comparison, only one Baker's square will cause big problems.

If your dog eats chocolate you can call the poison control number I have on the front page or call your veterinarian. Have the type and quantity of chocolate ingested ready so we can do the math. We can do calculations to see how much actual caffeine and theobromine they ingested.

Funny story: I once had an owner call me on emergency and say that her dog had just eaten an entire pound of dark chocolate covered espresso beans. Bad, BAD dog. I told her we had to get him to vomit ASAP. She replied, "Oh, he already vomited them up." "Fantastic," I replied. "But then he just ate them all back up again." DOH! BAD, BAD, BAD OWNER! Dogs will never fail to disgust you with their gastronomical tastes. Luckily the dog did well after we had him vomit the beans a SECOND time and kept him away from them. We had to watch him closely, he did have problems, but he survived.

AMH

Sarcoptic Mange

Posted by Aaron

Monday, April 27, 2009


















Historically, this is the mite that people are referring to when they say a dog has "The Mange." The other type of mange mite is demodex. Demodex is sometimes referred to as "Red Mange."

Sarcoptic mange is a condition caused by a mite called Sarcoptes scabiei. There is a video and picture above. There is also a picture of the skin of a dog with sarcoptic mange. This poor stray was found like this and it was the worst I've ever seen. The pictures are painful and no, he didn't survive.

Sarcoptic mange is ridiculously itchy. These guys are so itchy that they simply can't stop. On a scale of 1-10 of itch, they are a 12. The itch is usually worse along the ears, elbows, ankles, and shoulders. There is usually a scale or crust over the itchy areas. The pictures above are about as severe as it gets. Usually they are just a little crusty and VERY itchy.

Treatment for these guys has become very easy. My personal favorite is to use Revolution now and then in 2 weeks. That cures them. Other options are Ivermectin injections or oral dose once weekly for four treatments. Dips are a waste of time IMHO. These guys have secondary infection and require antibiotics as well. You can't really use a steroid - at least not at first - because it will make them WAY worse. After the first treatment, you can usually get away with some steroid.

When you first treat them, the itch is worse as the adults die off. This only lasts a day or two, then they feel SOOOO much better.


People can get this one. Pretty nasty once you see the images above. It's quite contagious, but requires fairly close contact with the pet or bedding. As you can see, these little Jabba the Hut guys don't exactly have legs that work well for walking. So they can't crawl across the room to get to you. However, they are able to get from dog to person if you are snuggled up together or if the dog sleeps in bet with you. In people, infection looks like chiggers. They're in the same family. We aren't the intended host, so our body kills them off as soon as they start trying to burrow into our skin. They ITCH like a son-of-a-gun. Your physician can help you with the right treatment, but usually in people it's steroid cream to calm the inflammation because our bodies kill them off so quickly.

Yuck.

AMH

Anal Sacs - or - "Honey, what's that smell?"

Posted by Aaron

Saturday, April 25, 2009


Ever noticed a time that your dog had a fishy, rotten kind of odor associated with the tailpipe? Perhaps they were scooting on the floor, dragging their anus along your new carpet? These are usually anal sac issues.

The anal sacs are a pair of sacs (usually grape-sized depending on the dog) that sit at approximately 5 o'clock and 7 o'clock around the anus (as pictured above). The sacs are under the skin and between the two anal sphincters. The sacs are connected to the anus via a pair of small ducts. The sacs are lined with glands that secrete the tinny, fishy, nasty stuff that you smell from time to time. It's a unique smell to each dog and helps to explain the age-old question: "Why does my dog sniff the other dog's butt?"

These sacs will sometimes fill up with the material and require emptying or "expressing." If the sacs become inflamed or infected, it is referred to as anal sacculitis. If the infection becomes severe and the actual sac itself begins to break down, then it can become an anal sac abscess. These abscesses will actually rupture through the skin and create a draining tract. They are amazingly painful and fairly nasty! Any dog licking and painful or any dog with a red swelling next to the anus needs to be seen as an emergency so we can get an antibiotic started and get the abscess under control.

Anal sac abscesses that are not properly treated (meaning not given antibiotics long enough or an owner that stops the antibiotics too soon) run a risk of creating these nasty scar tracts in the tissue around the anus called fistulous tracts. These can be a major pain in the rear (literally and figuratively) to treat.

Question: How often do I need to express my dog's anal sacs?
Answer: perhaps never. Some dogs require fairly regular work back there. Others never ever have them done. It completely depends on the individual. If they are licking, scooting, or smelling fishy, they probably need them expressed.

Question: How do I prevent problems?
Answer: IF you have a dog with repeat problems, then you may have to just keep on top of it. However, I've found it hard to predict which dogs will have problems and which ones will just require occasional help.

Question: How do I express my dog's anal sacs?
Answer: Have a veterinarian or qualified technician show you how. It's not too hard. It is fairly stinky and probably best done outside or in the bathtub. However, if you're too rough you can hurt things, so make sure you know what you're doing.

I'm a purist on this one - they are anal SACS lined with anal GLANDS. So when someone comes to me and asks me to express a dog's anal glands, it bugs me. It really bugs me and I usually can't help but correct them. I'm the first to admit I have one or two quirks that people have to put up with and this is one of them.

Many veterinarians will say that they are checking/expressing/flushing anal glands. I have to bite my tongue and avoid the impulse to yell across the room, "They're anal sacs!!!!!!" Anyone who has worked for me has heard me yell across the room something similar to this at least once.

AMH

Toad lickin' Good

Posted by Aaron

Friday, April 17, 2009



As a general statement - Licking toads is not a great idea. It's gross.


Most all toads or frogs will secrete a noxious substance on their skin that makes them taste quite foul to a predator. These toxins are usually harmless, although they will cause severe drooling, lip smacking, and sometimes vomiting.


The toads associated with severe intoxication are in the genus Bufo. Specifically Bufo marinus and Bufo alvarius, also known as the marine (or cane toad) and the Colorado River Toad respectively. Marine bufo toads are primarily found in southern Florida and parts of south and east Texas. Marine toads are native to Central and South America as well as Puerto Rico. They were introduced to Hawaii to help control sugar cane pests and to Australia to control an invasive beetle. They failed at both of these tasks. I'm not sure how they got into Texas. Bufo toads are pretty large. Adults are typically 4-6 inches from nose to rump.



The Colorado River Toad is native to southern Arizona, California, New Mexico and northern Mexico.



Both toads produce toxic substances from a collection of glands along the side of their heads called the parotid glands. In the case of marine toads, the toxins primarily affect the heart and will cause heart attack and death. The Colorado river toads primarily produce a hallucinogenic compound similar to LSD and can cause central nervous system depression, brain damage, and death. Both toads produce both toxins.



Usually, owners notice their pet salivating heavily, panting, and they may seem weak or collapse. IMMEDIATELY wash the pet's mouth with water. Be careful not to be bitten or to suffocate the pet.



If you don't live in Hawaii, Florida, Puerto Rico, or Texas, you're not supposed to have to worry. I've seen one or two of these in my career. They're impressive.


AMH

Awww, Nuts

Posted by Aaron

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

The title is tacky, but I couldn't resist. Let's talk about neutering.

If you have a prostate, and you have testicles, you WILL have a problem with the afore mentioned prostate. This happens routinely in human males and is why all men over the age of 40 should have PSAs run and digital prostate exams.


The SAME problem happens in dogs. Testosterone causes the prostate to continue developing and enlarging. At some point this may cause the urethra to become pinched off or may get so huge that you can't pass a stool either. Intact male dogs should have a prostate exam completed yearly. There is not a PSA test available for dogs yet.


Neutering removes testosterone and pretty much makes the prostate a non-issue.


Here's a news flash: Testosterone makes you do stupid stuff. Dogs with extra testosterone are more likely to show behaviors like urine marking, dominance, aggression, territorialism, and overactive libido. That's not to say that an intact dog is a "bad" dog and a neutered dog is a "good" dog. No, no. Neutered dogs can still be all of those things. But in so much as testosterone can make bad behaviors worse - it's not worth having it around if you don't need it.


It doesn't make you less of a man to have a dog without testicles. Honestly. Nobody cares if your dog is well-endowed. Nobody. However, if it's really that important to you that something hang down between the legs, then there are implants available called neuticals.



AMH

Breast cancer in dogs

Posted by Aaron

Friday, April 10, 2009

Today is the Susan G. Komen Foundation 3-day walk around here. Hopefully everyone is aware of the cause and has found a way to support the walk for a cure. I thought I would write a piece about breast cancer in dogs. In many ways it parallels the disease in humans. One of the biggest differences is that we have a way to make a MAJOR dent in prevelance of disease. Breast cancer is very difficult to impossible to treat in dogs given our current access to medicines and practical financial limitations. So prevention is the focus!

I can't count the number of times I have an owner look at me in shock when I tell them that one of the main reasons we recommend spaying female puppies is to reduce the risk of breast cancer. Dogs get breast cancer, just like human females. It is also hormonally influenced and patients that have experienced estrogen surges (i.e. heat, estrus, periods) are more likely to develop tumors. There is also a genetic influence. Breast cancer can run in families.

If a female is spayed before her first heat cycle, her risk of breast cancer is less than 5/100ths of a percent. VERY tiny.

If spayed after the first, but before the second, the risk is about 8% (a 160-fold rise!).

If spayed after the second cycle, the risk is just over 26% (about an additional 3-fold rise. these girls are now 520 times more likely to develop cancer).

So that means over 1 in 4 females intact after their second cycle will have breast cancer. That's HUGE. Not to mention the number of females with uterine infections, uterine cancer, and ovarian cancer. Add all ovarian, uterine, and breast tumors together and intact females are about 33% likely to develop cancer of the urogenital system. ONE IN THREE!


Spaying AFTER a second cycle doesn't really lower the odds, however, femals spayed at a mature age are more likely to have benign tumors than females who are intact at the time of tumor diagnosis. Females spayed at any age will have the ovaries and uterus removed, so those girls can't develop ovarian or uterine tumors either.

So make sure you REALLY want those puppies before you give your dog a 1 in 3 chance of developing cancer as opposed to a 1 in 2000 chance if you spay her as a puppy.

Food for thought.


AMH

Prescription drug laws

Posted by Aaron

I have folks get mad at me from time to time when I say that I can't fill a prescription because the pet hasn't had a physical exam within the last year.

Here's the deal.

1) Even in the case of medications that are recurrent and we think we're on the right dose, we may not be. Lots of drugs require monitoring to make sure we're doing the right thing. When I suggest or require blood work for a dog on thyroid supplement, it's not just for poops and giggles. It's because thyroid supplement needs CHANGE OVER TIME. Sometimes they don't. Sometimes they do. I can't predict.

2) Most importantly - IT'S ILLEGAL FOR ME TO PRESCRIBE A MEDICATION TO A PET THAT DOES NOT HAVE A VALID "VETERINARIAN-CLIENT-PATIENT-RELATIONSHIP." This is also known as a VCPR. The same goes in human medicine. If the prescribing physician has not seen the patient within the last year, it's illegal to prescribe. The relationship can be applied to all doctors in a practice. In other words, if any doctor in the practice has seen the pet, then another doctor could, if appropriate, prescribe a medication even if they have not personally seen the pet.

By the way - one veterinarian can't just call another hospital and say, "Hey, would you fill XYZ medication for this pet" if the receiving hospital has never seen the pet. That makes the hospital filling the medication a "pharmacy" and pharmacy laws then apply. Without a registered pharmacist on staff, you're not a pharmacy. Operating as such means big-time fines.

These laws apply to ALL legend drugs. Even the ones that seem harmless. These laws include heartworm prevention!

Oddly enough, there can be two forms of the SAME medication (take, for instance, certain dewormers). One may be over the counter version of the same strength that you could go to the store and buy with no prescription. However, if I happen to buy a different bottle of the stuff (same ingredient, same everything) and it has the magic words, "Caution: Federal (USA) law restricts this drug to use by or on the order of a licensed veterinarian" then it's illegal for me to sell without all of the i-dotting and t-crossing listed above. Silly, 'eh? Borderline stupid. But, so it is...

So don't get mad at your veterinarian because they say that a physical exam is required for them to fill a medication. They're not just screwing with you. It's not just about money. It's about good medicine, and it's always valuable to make sure you get what you need (nothing less, nothing more). Sometimes it's just plain required by federal law.

AMH

How do I cut my pet's nails?

Posted by Aaron

Thursday, April 9, 2009

This seems to be something that most owners are very nervous about. It's really not that hard.

Anatomy: The dog's nail is the same as ours, just a different shape. The nail bed produces the nail just like our cuticle generates ours. A dog's nail is rounded and covers a fleshy end of the toe that is known as the "quick." The quick is bone at the base, but out towards the end of the nail, it's just soft tissue, nerves, and blood supply.
Most folks find white or clear nails to be easier because you can see the pink underneath and know what NOT to cut. Dark nails are harder because you can't see it as easily. Trust me - seeing the quick helps, but sometimes they look like they are much shorter than they really are.
Here's the deal - you WILL at some point cut the nail too short and your pet WILL bleed and you will feel awful. Go into it expecting that at some point.
There are two types of nail clippers you'll find. The guillotine style made by Resco are the common, usually silver, clipper that the nail slides through the little loop at the end and when you squeeze, a blade slips across this and snips it off. The other type is referred to as bypass clippers. These have a pair of scallopped edges that trap the nail and when you squeeze, the cut from both sides. Which is better? Whichever you like. Usually - big dog nails are easier with bypass. I like guillotine for small dogs and cats - but I can use either.
How far do you trim them? As short as they'll go without bleeding. Sometimes that's easy to see. Sometimes you'll have to learn based on the first couple of nails what is too far and what's far enough. Picture an imaginary line extending out from and parallel to the bottom of the toe pad of an un-extended toe. The line will cut across the nail at about the right place to cut. In other words - the nail shouldn't touch the ground when the pet is standing in a normal position.
How often? When they need it. For most puppies, that means once every week to two weeks. For adults, usually once every 2-4 weeks. Some pets nails grow even more slowly and can go 6 weeks between trimming.

The best way to avoid having to trim the nails much at all is to take your dog for regular walks on concrete surfaces (i.e. - daily walks around the neighborhood on sidewalks). Short of that you are probably going to have to trim nails.
  • Technique 1 - Use a Dremmel (or other high-speed rotary tool) with the sanding drum on it. Use this to grind the nail back. The heat generated is useful to help drive the quick back. It's also nice because you have a softer surface as opposed to the sharp surface created by the clippers. Many dogs will respond to the heat of the Dremmel and start pulling back when you get close to the quick. YOU CAN STILL MAKE THEM BLEED. It's just a bit harder.
  • Technique 2 - Using either form of nail clipper, trim the nail just past the end of the quick.

In either case, keep some Quick Stop powder (or styptic). A pinch of powder on the bleeding end of the nail helps stop it quickly. If you don't have any Quick Stop, an easy home remedy is to use a pinch of flour or corn starch with gentle pressure on the end of the nail. That'll help it clot.

Cats are easy to see where to cut. Take the narrow, sharp, pointy part off. Try not to use human nail clippers. Cat nails are laminar and they will shatter with human clippers. They do better with little nail clippers.

Cool fact: Because the nail is laminar, cat's "sharpen" their claws by pulling successive layers of nail off the end, leaving the harder, sharper point below. Anyone with a cat has found these bits of nail that look like a cast of the end of the nail laying around. When you trim the nail, it has to grow out before it gets pointy enough for them to catch on anything.

Please, please, please, please, please - pretty please - start trimming your dog or cat's nails when they are little bitty babies. Foot/nail phobias are very common in dogs and cats. You have to start young or they may become so nervous about it that they become phobic. I can't tell you how many patients I have that require a wrestling match that potentially includes poop, pee, booty juice (anal sacs), slobber, and teeth. 99% of those patients could have been avoided if we had only started when they were 8 weeks old. It's just like with our own kids - you have to get them used to having their teeth brushed and their nails done when they're little. If you both get used to it when they are babies life is SO MUCH EASIER.

If you're still not comfortable cutting nails - take them to the groomer or your veterinarian starting when they are very young and get them used to it.

AMH

Should I shave my dog/cat for the summer?

Posted by Aaron

Tuesday, April 7, 2009



Believe it or not, I get this quiestion quite a bit. The answer? Sure. You can.

But - keep in mind that hair does several things for the pet. For one, it actually provides SHADE. This means that the skin actually stays cooler in the shade. It also provides protection from sunburn.

For those of you who know me, you know I used to have hair. I am now bald thanks to my Wahl shaver. If I forget to wear a hat - I BURN. So cutting off all the hair doesn't mean it's necessarily better for the pet's skin.

However, in some breeds, the undercoat can be SO dense and SO difficult to manage, that you either need to pay a good groomer to get the job done (and keep with it) or shave the hair. That's OK to do - but make sure and keep them out of the high-noon sun.

Most folks who shave their cats do so because the cat doesn't groom their long hair and ends up matted and nasty. Or, the cat is obnoxious about depositing hairballs on your pillow or in your shoe and we keep the hair short to reduce hairball formation. Lastly, some folks do it as a special form of humilation. Does the cat at the start of this post look happy?
And just because I look amazingly more sexy with no hair, it doesn't mean your pet will. ;D


AMH


Easter Lily Toxicity

Posted by Aaron




This is the week that lots of folks are going to have Easter Lilies around the house (if you're of the Easter persuasion). Asiatic lilies make attractive flowers for the home and garden. Many people grow them indoors in pots. These are definitely plants that require special attention to keep your pets safe.






All plants in the lilium genus are toxic to cats. Some daylilies are also on the list (hemerocallis) Dogs seem to be much harder to make sick. All parts of the plant are toxic. Ingestion of even one leaf on the plant can be fatal to a cat.




Oddly enough, we don't know exactly what causes the damage. We do know that the kidney's tubular lining is toasted, so there is some kind of direct cell death. The result is acute, severe, and usually irreversible kidney failure.

Early signs include vomiting, usually within a few hours. This will progress to weakness, lethargy, vomiting, changes in volume of urine within a day or so. Death follows.

Ingestion of the plant MUST be treated as an emergency and these guys need to be emptied out (by vomiting) and need to have lots of charcoal. Once they are sick, we support them with fluids and intensive hospital care, but it is a watch and wait situation. Patients who are not producing any urine or are more than two days out from ingestion carry a much poorer prognosis.
Please be careful with the lily plants. Dogs require a much larger dose of the plant to cause problems and you rarely hear of them suffering toxicity from the flower.
AMH

Poo's Clues

Posted by Aaron

Sunday, April 5, 2009

It's not pretty. We all make it. And it can be a goldmine of information.

To quote the TV show Scrubs: "If you wanna know what's wrong with you, it all comes down to number two!"

Not quite - but it highlights the wonders of stool. Poop. Doo doo. Feces. Stool is what's left over after your body has absorbed what it can from what you eat. The body also adds some fun stuff of its own on the way through.

You wanna know the major reason poo is brown? Stercobilin. It's a leftover metabolite of hemoglobin (the red color to your blood). The bacteria in the gut process it and it turns brown. Thus, COLOR of your poo is valuable. Orange, tan, white, gray, or black all mean something. (orange = jaundice? Black = digested blood or pepto-bismol? gray/greasy = undigested fats?)

In our companion pets, presence or absence of diarrhea is pretty important. Most dogs and cats eat a very regular diet. They should, therefore, produce normal, regular stool. Anything that speeds up the transit of stuff through the gut, the composition of the stuff in the gut, or interferes with the digestion of the stuff in the gut can create abnormal stools.

For instance: Giardia - this is a little single-celled parasite that infects the small intestines. It sits down on the lining of the gut and essentially clogs the works up. Food can't be digested. It makes it downstream to the colon where the colon bacteria throw a big kegger of a party and you get blow-out diarrhea. Similarly, Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBS in people) or intestinal tumors may cause the gut to fail in absorption of nutrients with the same outcome I mention above.

On the other end of the spectrum, constipation can also be important to identify. Anytime the stool is not allowed to pass before too much water is reabsorbed by the colon, you get constipation. Severe cases of constipation result in an inability to pass stools known as obstipation. Fiber, most specifically insoluble fiber, stimulates the colon muscles to contract and helps keep the poo on the move. Fiber is fantastic stuff. It's as important to our geriatric pets as it is to us people. Most of us don't get enough fiber, our colons turn in to saggy bags and we have all kinds of problems with constipation when we get old. FEED YOUR COLON FIBER. Seriously.

Constipation is a problem we see more often in cats. Cats are known to have motility problems in their colons and they just don't move things through very well. In advanced cases, this lack of movement wears out the colon muscles and in severe cases, the colon stops contracting and becomes very, very large. Those guys sometimes need surgery to remove the colon. Less severe cases can be managed with diet and medications to convince the colon to contract better.

One VERY important thing that your veterinarian should be asking you for each year is a stool sample from your dog or cat. Just because you have an "indoor" cat or dog doesn't mean you shouldn't have the stool checked. I've found roundworms in the stools of "indoor" only cats on several occasions. Each time the owner was shocked to hear this. Roundworms are important because they are zoonotic - meaning WE can pick them up! Cat's can continue to self-amplify whatever they have since they always use the same bathroom (litterbox), so sometimes little infections become big infections.

A fresh stool sample can be processed and looked at under a microscope. The type and number of bacteria, parasite eggs, parasites, types of white cells, and presence of starch or fats can all give clues as to the overall health of your pet. Even more critically is the issue that some of these parasites are the type that WE CAN GET THEM. Roundworms, hookworms, and giardia to name a few.

Anytime you visit your veterinarian for diarrhea in your pet - MAKE SURE AND BRING A SAMPLE. It makes life so much easier.

See - you never knew poo could be so cool.

AMH

Help! My male cat can't pee!

Posted by Aaron

Saturday, April 4, 2009

This is an emergency.

Kitty cats are prone to lower urinary tract disease. As I mentioned before in the diet post, we haven't quite managed to get feline nutrition figured out. Whether the problem is more diet related or genetic remains to be seen. Regardless, inflammation or infection of the lower urinary tract in cats is fairly common. It is most commonly referred to as FUS (Feline Urologic Syndrome) or FLUTD (Feline Lower Urinary Tract Disease).

In this post I want to specifically deal with the cat straining to urinate. In a female of any species, it's fairly hard to cause an obstruction of the urethra. It's shorter than the male and tends to flair out towards the end of the urethra. In the male, however, there's a lot more urethra to consider (in most species) and it tends to stay fairly consistent in diameter or actually get SMALLER towards the end. In dogs it has to go through a bone near the end of the penis (called the os penis).

Male cats are a little bit special in regard to the penile urethra. The urethra isn't that much longer than in the female, but the trick is that the urethra gets a bit smaller towards the end. This is important in cats because in cases of FUS the urinary bladder becomes so inflamed that bits of mucous, white cell debris, and usually some crystals or small stones are all formed as part of the inflammatory process. When you mix all that goo together, it can form a plug. When that plug travels down the urethra, it gets caught up towards the end (where it becomes smaller) and obstruct the urethra. Obstruction = BAD. BAD = Emergency.

So, the moral of the story is that ANY MALE CAT STRAINING TO URINATE MUST BE SEEN ON AN EMERGENCY BASIS. Not later, not tomorrow morning, not after work. NOW. Any animal straining to urinate should be seen quickly so we can properly identify the reason, rule out emergency causes and start treatments so the poor dears can feel better quickly.

AMH

How do I know my pet needs his teeth cleaned?

Posted by Aaron

Friday, April 3, 2009

Dental disease is a BIG issue with our pets. Thankfully, advances in Veterinary Dentistry have made our ability to deal with dental disease light-years ahead of where it was even ten years ago.

When I graduated, I only knew how to scale a dog's teeth. I kind of knew how to probe the teeth and really had no idea how to properly extract a tooth or do a local anesthesia block properly. I'm nearly ashamed to admit it, but honestly I just didn't know any better. It's sad, really, because Texas A&M prepared me in just about every way but that. Dentistry just wasn't a priority back then.

Fast forward to today. Night and day. The equipment available, the training available, dental x-ray - it's all relatively new. I've had to work HOURS and HOURS of continuing education to get to where I am now. Today, I'm pretty darned good at it (if I may say so).

But enough about me :)

We're not terribly concerned about how the teeth "look." Pretty, white teeth are a human thing, but not so much with our companion pets. Periodontal disease is the big problem. I'll post again about the specifics of periodontal disease.

So how do you know? The best way to know is to stop in and have your veterinarian check the teeth. He or She will be able to help you really get a good look and decide if a cleaning (prophy) is necessary.

If you're at home and want to check the first question is: Does your pet's mouth smell like a garbage dump? And secondly: Are there things growing on your dog's teeth that look like they came out of a swamp? If the answer to either of these is yes - see your veterinarian.

If your dog doesn't smell like last weeks leftover chicken carcass that's been out in the sun sealed up in a black bag then the next step is to "Flip the Lip." Merial (a drug company) launched this campaign a couple of years ago and it's a great way to present it. When I'm in the room and look at the teeth, I'll usually show the owner as well. At least 80%, maybe 90% of the owners have never actually looked at the teeth! The answer - Flip the Lip. Look at all of the teeth. Signs that there are problems:

  • Red gums
  • Exposed roots
  • Tartar build up covering the teeth
  • Any teeth that move when you touch them. They shouldn't do that :)
  • Broken teeth
  • Foul odor

Any of these problems and the answer is YES - your pet needs evaluated. At this point, "brushing the teeth" isn't going to fix the problem.

In my next post, I'll talk about what a dental prophylaxis actually involves.

AMH

Gone Fishin'

Posted by Aaron

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

I saw a patient tonight at the emergency room who had fallen off a cliff, drowned, and was spectacularly brought back to life by his teenage owner. That's the story, at least, and he's sticking to it.

Reynolds is a typical young, knucklehead black lab that went out fishing with her owner today at Denton Creek. The boys had hiked out a bit to get to a deeper part of the river to fish. Reynolds was, as usual, having a great time and was running around as they hiked down beside the creek to find the right spot.

Somehow Reynolds managed to loose her footing while she was walking along the bank and tumbled down to the creek below. She apparently hit her head on the way down and when she hit the water, she was stunned and immediately sunk. Her owner, Joe, jumped off the bank into the water and had to go under to get her back to the surface. He swam back to the bank and by then she was not breathing and her eyes had gone blank.

Joe somehow kept his cool, lay her out on the bank and began to squeeze her chest when he noticed she wasn't breathing. He kept with her for a minute or two and she suddenly started breathing again. She hacked up some water and was disoriented for a few minutes. They both had to find a way out of the mud and hump it back up the hill to get out. It was then a hike back out of the woods and to the car.

By the time they got to me at the emergency room, Reynolds was 100% herself. She seems absolutely fine on examination. I'm sending home a couple days antibiotic to protect her from any pneumonia from inhaling the creek water.

In the initial story, the fall was down a short hill into a creek. By the time I published this story the fall was twenty five feet and the water three feet deep. By tomorrow, I'm sure it will be a fifty foot fall from a rocky cliff into the deep, black, frigid waters below. It doesn't matter. It's a really cool story and deserves to be told. Way to go, Joe.

AMH

Things That Fly and Sting

Posted by Aaron

'Tis the season for all the bees and wasps to start coming out. We're seeing them in droves here in Texas and soon the entire country will be warm enough.

Bees and wasps do the same things to our pets that they do to us. Most pets will experience a little bit of swelling, pain, and maybe even some fluid weeping from the site of the sting. Wasp stings can HURT like a son of a gun! Remember, wasps don't leave the stinger behind. Bees do.

First aid for bee stings are the same for our pets as they are for us. Remove the stinger, keep it clean. Cold compress can help. You can use products like Benadryl spray or cream to help with the swelling.

Dogs and cats can have severe adverse reactions. Facial swelling, hives, difficulty breathing, or vomiting/diarrhea can all happen with severe reactions. These are the exception, though. Most pets only suffer localized pain and swelling.

As a good rule of thumb, you can give Benadryl (diphenhydramine) at about 1mg/pound of weight as a first aid drug. Benadryl comes as a 25mg capsule or caplet and also as 12.5mg/tsp liquid. 25 pound dog gets one tablet. 6 pound dog gets 1/2 tsp. Pretty much any time you suspect an allergic reaction, you can give diphenhydramine. You should also call your primary care veterinarian or local veterinary emergency room if you suspect ANY kind of significant reaction outside of a little pain and swelling.

AMH