Dog-vet interface problem - any ideas?

Dog-vet interface problem - any ideas?

Author
Discussion

SGirl

Original Poster:

7,918 posts

262 months

Monday 15th January 2018
quotequote all
Our rescue lurcher is about 7 years old now, and a couple of years ago she ruptured a cruciate ligament which required surgery. Not long after she was back to full fitness, she cut herself while on a mission and needed stitches, so she had to have another anaesthetic. And then, as the icing on the cake, one of the pins in her repair worked loose so she needed more surgery to fix that.

She's always had a few health problems on account of having been a starving stray when the Dogs Trust picked her up, and initially she enjoyed going to the vet's. But since the last run of surgery and check-ups, she's been terrified of going near the place.

As an example of how extreme her fear is, I took her in just to get her chip read a few weeks ago. Nothing exciting - go in, wait in waiting room for literally 1 minute, lady comes out with scanner, reads chip, we go away. Dog was fine going up to the door, but from the moment we went in she was screaming and fighting to get back outside. We weren't even going into a consulting room, it was just the act of going into the waiting room that set her off.

The problem is, she's now damaged her other leg and I suspect it's cruciate-related, so she needs to see a vet. But she may make her injury worse while trying to get away, and I really don't want her having a heart attack due to the stress.

Has anyone else encountered such a problem, and if so how did you get round it?

Here's the horrible hound in question. Feeling very sorry for herself!


SGirl

Original Poster:

7,918 posts

262 months

Monday 15th January 2018
quotequote all
Thanks for the info! I didn't realise vets still did home calls, I'll give them a go. smile Failing that, the car park would be a good compromise - as long as I can get a space, they only have 3...

SGirl

Original Poster:

7,918 posts

262 months

Monday 22nd January 2018
quotequote all
Thanks for the good ideas, everybody! beer

As an update: we decided in the end to take her back to the vet who did her original cruciate surgery. Poppy enjoyed going to visit her before all this phobia thing started, so we hoped the simple change of scenery would help.

Well, it helped a bit. She was still trembly and scared when the vet was examining her, but there was no screaming (from either party...) and Poppy wasn't too bad while she was in the waiting room. There's still a lot of work to be done though. I used to take Caesar to just sit in the waiting room early on Saturdays when he was a tiny pup and the place was quiet, looks like I might have to do that with Poppy for a while now. I'll speak to them and see if they're amenable to the idea.

Anyway, the problem now is that the vet is 99% certain that the cruciate is the problem, so Dawg is booked in for an X-ray and probably surgery tomorrow morning. frown Mind you, I'd take a ruptured cruciate over osteosarcoma any day!

SGirl

Original Poster:

7,918 posts

262 months

Thursday 22nd February 2018
quotequote all
Some good ideas there - thank you! beer

Our vets are quite amenable to the idea of letting us just turn up at random times and hang around for a couple of minutes if they're quiet, but I'm waiting with that particular plan until Poppy's leg is better. What we've been doing is popping into the vet's when we arrive and then leaving the dog in the car until we're called - she still gets stressed about it, but she doesn't have time to get too worked up before she's being examined, and the vet is very good so she lets us take the dog back to the car and then chats to us about what we need to do next. I'm reluctant to try home visits because Poppy feels safe at home, I don't want her to be scared that the vet is coming to get her in her safe place.

The leg was healing nicely until two weekends ago, but she's been hobbling on three legs since - the vet says it's normal and she'll get better soon, but I'm not seeing much evidence of that at the moment. She's still on anti-inflammatories, might have to go back to the vet's next week if she doesn't start to improve soon. frown

SGirl

Original Poster:

7,918 posts

262 months

Monday 26th February 2018
quotequote all
The laser treatment thing is a really good idea - thanks! I've got to ring the vet this week, I'll ask her about it then.

The surgery has already been done to repair the rupture, but now the recovery seems to be taking a lot of time. All was well for about three weeks - Poppy was happy, using the leg, etc. - but then she took a turn for the worse for no apparent reason (she's not been allowed to run around or use the stairs or anything). We're now about five weeks post-op and she's still on three legs.

Still. On the upside, her previous cruciate repair job is holding up splendidly to the additional wear and tear. smile