Vet School 101 How to get better, safer pain relief for your pets’ anesthetic procedures

Your dog is all set to undergo a simple spay or—God forbid!—your kitty is scheduled for a major mass removal. You want the best kind of anesthetics and pain relievers. You may even be leery (if not downright afraid) of the anesthesia she’ll require for the procedure. But are you aware of the many choices for pain relief that can make anesthesia safer and dramatically reduce your pets’...

January 22nd, 2009 40 Comments

Vet School 101 Leeches: “What works and what sucks” in veterinary medicine

Yes, veterinary surgeons use leeches. Mostly, this happens at the highest levels of vet medicine (usually in university settings) where degloving injuries, traumatic amputations, tissue flaps and non-healing wounds are commonly dealt with.

For the average veterinarian and pet owner, leeches might seem like a throwback to the days when George Washington was leeched and bled with regularity by...

January 3rd, 2009 36 Comments

Vet School 101 Ehrlichia, ticks and the case of the elusive Christmas Eve diagnosis

Christmas Eve is not the best day of the year to come down with any illness that eludes obvious diagnosis. That’s what happened to the eight year-old Rottweiler who arrived as a last-minute emergency before we closed for last week’s holiday.

When she arrived, Trixie had been restless and uncomfortable overnight. Her owners suspected a serious flare-up of her arthritis and were seeking some...

January 2nd, 2009 42 Comments

Vet School 101 Top ten tips for pet poisonings and accidental ingestions

Your kitten doesn’t greet you when you come home from work one day. Instead, she’s hiding behind the toilet engrossed in a grim task: playing with the remnants of a bottle of spilled Tylenol gelcaps. Damn!—you thought you picked up every last one. Meanwhile, an unseen stash was hiding in the corner.

At least five gelcaps have been bitten to shreds. Their contents are oozing on the floor and...

December 20th, 2008 14 Comments

Vet School 101 Spay it forward: Ovariectomy vs. ovariohysterectomy in veterinary medicine

Did you know that sometimes veterinarians spay in different ways? Some of us take out the ovaries and the uterus. Others take the ovaries alone.

The debate among veterinarians on this point has often been heated. European vets can’t for the life of them figure why American vets take it all out. Vice versa’s typically the case, too. Why NOT prevent all those pesky potential uterine issues...

December 18th, 2008 50 Comments

Vet School 101 Fatty tumors: Lumpy bumpy lipomas and their care

Some of you know the drill well: A new lumpy-bumpy pops up, seemingly overnight. You make the appointment, trek to the vet hospital and have your vet stick a needle in it. She then checks the cells she’s extracted under a microscope and sometimes decides to send another slide to the pathologist for examination. She then adds a description of the mass to a chart she keeps that details your...

December 6th, 2008 39 Comments

Vet School 101 Saddle thrombus: On blood clots, heart disease and your cat

You wake up groggily one Saturday morning—admittedly a bit on the late side—and you suddenly realize how it is you managed to sleep in. Your ten year-old kitty companion is nowhere to be seen. She’s typically right there, meowling and staring at you plaintively so you’ll get up and fill her food bowl.

You look everywhere and finally you find her in her strange-guests-are-here hiding spot...

November 23rd, 2008 89 Comments

Vet School 101 Understanding “adverse anesthetic events” in pets (Part 2: Twelve steps to avoid them)

It’s well known that precautions can be taken to mitigate the potential havoc anesthesia can wreak on any given patient, human or animal. In human medicine, safety measures are governed by scrupulous standards, which are the result of meticulous research.

The veterinary profession has learned a great deal from its human counterpart, given that science in the realm of animal-specific anesthesia...

November 17th, 2008 35 Comments

Vet School 101 Understanding “adverse anesthetic events” in pets (Part 1: The numbers)

Sadly, everyone knows someone whose pet has died mysteriously under anesthesia. This disturbing knowledge, second-hand though it may be, makes even the most rational among us cringe when it comes to having our own pets anesthetized.

It’s one thing to know that emergencies must be dealt with anesthetically. We accept that broken bones, swallowed toys and lacerations are inevitably treated to a...

November 16th, 2008 40 Comments

Vet School 101 When pet grooming gets medical…

…veterinarians step in.

I’m no groomer. And no, I don’t relish adopting the mantle of those far better qualified than a vet to trim, snip and clip. I do it only when a pet’s health is involved.

So you know, groomers don’t like it when we encroach on their territory by offering similar services—no more than we like it when they offer healthcare advice willy-nilly, anyway.

It’s true that I’m not...

November 5th, 2008 29 Comments