A veterinary blog for pet lovers, vet voyeurs and the medically curious...
Support Dolittler: Subscribe!
Search

The importance of blood in my everyday life cannot be understated. Beyond my own biological need for the red juice that provides my every vital cell with oxygen, it’s a substance we vets deal with daily for a variety of reasons. Its messiness is similarly inestimable (as those of you who shunned vet work for that very reason well know).

Bloody messes are impressive, no doubt. Blood has a way of splashing walls with an ominous spray and  paw-painting tables and floors indiscriminately. The worst, however, is the understandable horror it provokes when our own pets end up coated with the wet, messy stuff. It’s a pretty good indication for driving top-speed through city streets to get your beloved to the vet ASAP. 

Inevitably, however, blood has a way of looking more sinister than it truly is. There’s a long human history of fascination with our liquid life-force, represented biblically in oenological terms, by bloody sacrifices in far-flung parts of the world and in the ubiquitous, cross-cultural vampire stories we’re so fond of. Maybe that’s why we often freak way out of proportion to the [usually insignificant] quantities spilled.

Yesterday was a perfect example. One of our clients called, frantic, claiming that one of his “bitches” had bitten through another’s jugular. Sounds like a riff from a rap song but it was much worse than that: this client was a Presa Canario breeder. And he was already on his way with the gigantic, bloody beast of a dog.

On hearing of the impending arrival, I called the specialty hospital across the street and begged a few liters of blood off their stash.

Just then, the client crashes through the hospital door with not one but two Presas. Both humongous beasts (not to mention the owner) were soaked in blood. Neither was in need of any extra: both panting tongues were nice and pink like a full-blooded Presa’s should be. And they were both merrily lumbering along as if they had no idea they’d recently served as one another’s dental pincushions. Apparently, the only one not having a good time was the still-shaken owner.

True, there was an astounding amount of blood, largely attributable to one of the girls’ ear lacerations (a notoriously generous source). But that was the worst of it. No severed jugular. (Cancel the blood order!) I assured the owner that he’s have been swimming in dog blood if such had been the case and that neither dog’s life was in jeopardy.

Such reactions are common. One owner went so far as to bring my vet boyfriend a picture of the battle scene between his Jack Russell and his cat. (His cat was covered with blood and in shock.) The scene of the crime was a large walk-in closet. Everything visible was coated with blood darn-nigh waist-level. It turned out that all the blood had come from the dog’s nose when the defender neatly sliced through the philtrum between the Jack’s nostrils with a well-aimed claw. The cat was essentially unharmed and recovered well.

But don’t assume vets are immune to the impressive display of blood. There’s a sudden intake of breath that accompanies an unexpected slice through a sizable vessel. It’s not just the cerebral acknowledgement of the potential danger of blood loss that gives us pause; it’s the visually stunning act of copious bleeding that also works on all of us at a very raw, emotional level.

Why else would clients pass out during a blood draw, panic when they inadvertently trim their pets’ toenails too short and scream when they arrive home to a nosebleed disaster?

The dramatic surge of blood in an open cavity, the surprisingly powerful spray from a small cat’s severed artery; they fill us with a primal sort of wonder. I, for one, have always marveled at the aesthetic splendor of blood; from the beautiful bright arterial reds down to the pinks and blues in a stained smear under a microscope.

Is that weird?

I once heard a vet surgeon say, “Bleeding is only significant when you can hear it.” Part of that statement comes from a surgeon’s blustery pride in his willingness to unearth an audibly pumping monster. The other part is a respectful recognition that blood and blood’s ways are truly amazing.

For my part, however, I hope I never have to hear a patient bleed. I’m happy just to watch as I do my best to stop it.

Comments
One of the bloodiest "appearing" messes I can think of is an ear hematoma come open on a lab! The room looked like a scene from a horror movie! He was your typical young lab (energetic and happy) and he left his "mark" on our clinic! What a mess!
# Posted By Mandi | 1/23/07 6:46 PM
I was trying to vaccinate a wild yellow lab and he swiped his tail over the needle and sliced the tip of his tail. The dog never felt a thing but OHHH the blood did fly. We had to replace the ceiling tile. I thought the owner was going to pass out. Blood never bothers me unless the needle is in my arm. I can handle bite, cuts things like that to myself, I can draw blood on anything, but I can't watch the needle go into my vein.
# Posted By Lori | 1/24/07 2:42 AM
Omigod! An exploding ear hematoma! I've never seen that happen. Was it lacerated by something? was it stuck with a needle? Sounds unbelievably messy.
# Posted By Dr. Patty Khuly | 1/24/07 9:34 AM
Yes it had been lanced. It was so swollen and you know how they flap their ears back and forth. It was a horrible mess!
# Posted By Mandi | 1/24/07 9:40 AM
There was a Great Dane mix that came into our shelter named Dan. He was a very happy dog that *constantly* wagged his tail. However, we didn't have a stall big enough for him. Sure, he could turn around and move in it, but his tail tip reached at least one concrete wall at all times. And he wagged his tail so much, he beat the tip off on the concrete. That really had blood every where. He could not feel it. But it certainly bled something awful with a fine happy spray. And we could only bandage it for so long because he'd beat the bandage off too. It was hard to find a home for this large enthusiastic boy, particularly since he liked cats so much. He liked them as snacks. He was returned to us once for that reason.
# Posted By Georg | 1/24/07 10:48 AM
My vet once said, during surgery on one of my ferrets, "Well, all bleeding stops. Eventually." Har har har. Yes, I love her.
# Posted By Pam | 1/25/07 7:19 PM
The full comment (for the nervous first year surgical resident) is "All bleeding stops eventually, and it's not your blood."
# Posted By Sandy | 1/26/07 9:38 PM
Split tails are a common occurance at the shelter that I used to volunteer at and the blood splatters across the walls were definitly dramatic.
# Posted By Shannon | 4/8/08 9:43 PM
S M T W T F S
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
VIRTUAL VET HOSPITAL
Got a sick pet? Visit our Virtual Vet Hospital and admit your own pets as patients in Dolittler's unique pet healthcare forum.
PODCASTS
New! Download our latest podcasts:
ARCHIVES
FAVORITE POSTS
RECOMMENDED
CAREERISTS
Did you always want to be a vet or vet technician? Thinking about it? Working on it? Need some Help?
VetInfo.com
AVMA
Miami Vet Specialist
Penn Vet School
DVM.com
VIN
Vet News Network
Vet Practice News
Vetstoria
"The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated."
- Mohandas Gandhi
This blog is running version 5.003.