Today's encounter with health care
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@Horace said in Today's encounter with health care:
he got into an argument over food with his step brother, and got bit.
Interesting. Dog bites are generally pretty clean (unlike
The Beecat bites). Glad that there's a resolution. Gonna be messy for a while, but he'll feel a hell of a lot better by the end of the week. -
@Horace said in Today's encounter with health care:
hopefully the antibiotics will work.
Most important thing is to be able to drain it. Pus is the accumulation of white blood cells fighting a bacterial infection. If they can get out (by draining it), there's more that can come in and fight the infection. If the abscess is contained, the response is self-limiting. The antibiotics will pick up the slack.
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I expect he will feel better, I sure hope so. Not sure why they would need a biopsy when there was an obvious wound involved.
But Loki is right about emergency vet clinics being a giant hole into which one pours money. They will usually offer you the most expensive option.
In their defense, they have and have to maintain a lot of space, 24-7 personnel and equipment your average vet does not have - MRIs, ultrasounds, etc. Maybe even CAT scans, I don't know.
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@Mik said in Today's encounter with health care:
emergency vet clinics being a giant hole
Indeed. When Boris had his adventure with his neutering, the bills were north of $2K (ICU care, IVs, antibiotics, O2). Insurance covered it, less my deductible. I'd NEVER go without again.
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Hope all goes well, Horace. Sounds positive.
Not sure if you mentioned, what kind of dog is he? The reason I ask, is that George mentioned squeezing the puss out, but if your dog is big, with big teeth, even as his owner I'd be a bit afraid. I mean, if you did something like that to me, I'd bite you too!
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Hope he gets better soon!!
BTW @horace How did your hand surgery go?
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@George-K said in Today's encounter with health care:
@Mik said in Today's encounter with health care:
emergency vet clinics being a giant hole
Indeed. When Boris had his adventure with his neutering, the bills were north of $2K (ICU care, IVs, antibiotics, O2). Insurance covered it, less my deductible. I'd NEVER go without again.
Wow! ICU to spay a cat? You can neuter a male cat with a pocket knife and an alcohol swab....
When I had Booger (my dog) neutered, the best I remember it was less than 150 bucks.
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@taiwan_girl said in Today's encounter with health care:
Hope he gets better soon!!
BTW @horace How did your hand surgery go?
It went well! I can move my thumb again. Still paranoid that it'll far apart spontaneously like after last surgery. But I guess the repair last time was DOA since I couldn't twitch the thumb immediately after waking up from the anaesthesia. I will never know what went wrong. Maybe she tied a trick knot as a goof. Those wacky hand surgeons.
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@Larry said in Today's encounter with health care:
Wow! ICU to spay a cat?
Boris was neutered and had a complication. Apparently they had to intubate him because he became a bit, er, unruly during the procedure and he needed general anesthesia.
The intubation was traumatic, and it lacerated his trachea causing "subcutaneous emphysema." The air tracked into his tissues under his skin and also around his heart. He was sick as hell for a few days.
It should have been, as you say, a 'nothing,' but it became a BFD.
Boris was neutered on Thursday of last week, and he did great. It's almost as though nothing happened. He came home happy and hungry.
This morning, he seemed a little listless, and the first clue was that he didn't sleep with us. The second clue was when I went to feed him, he didn't seem ravenous. He hopped down from the desk he was sleeping on, and rubbed on my leg, a bit, when I popped the can of wet food. He ate about ΒΌ of the can, and went back to the desk...
Hmmm..
Just didn't look right.
I took him to our vet, and she diagnosed subcutaneous emphysema. Basically, this is a collection of air under the skin. It can occur in various situations. When you feel him, you can feel "pops" like bubble wrap (but much smaller, of course).
The most worrisome is an anaerobic bacterial infection. These bugs produce gas that collects under the skin. However, he had no fever, and the rest of his vitals were OK.Second cause is trauma. If he gets into a fight with another cat (Maggie still hasn't accepted him because he pesters her, a bite on the neck can cause a laceration of the trachea, allowing air to escape into the surrounding tissues. Blunt trauma, such as being hit by a car can do it too. A third possibility is that, during the neutering, he was intubated, and that caused a tracheal laceration. Seems like that's the most likely possibility.
Our vet seemed concerned enough that she recommended taking him to a place where they can give more "intensive" care for him, including monitoring, oxygen therapy, etc.
Usually, the treatment is just supportive - make him comfy with O2, pain meds. If he deteriorates, he might need surgery to repair a tracheal laceration.
The plan is to watch him for at least one (probably two) day to make sure he's not getting worse.
He sure looked miserable when we left.
He's had a horrible week, poor guy.
The red arrows point to the collections of air under his skin:
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@Horace said in Today's encounter with health care:
@taiwan_girl said in Today's encounter with health care:
Hope he gets better soon!!
BTW @horace How did your hand surgery go?
It went well! I can move my thumb again. Still paranoid that it'll far apart spontaneously like after last surgery. But I guess the repair last time was DOA since I couldn't twitch the thumb immediately after waking up from the anaesthesia. I will never know what went wrong. Maybe she tied a trick knot as a goof. Those wacky hand surgeons.
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@George-K said in Today's encounter with health care:
@Larry said in Today's encounter with health care:
Wow! ICU to spay a cat?
Boris was neutered and had a complication. Apparently they had to intubate him because he became a bit, er, unruly during the procedure and he needed general anesthesia.
The intubation was traumatic, and it lacerated his trachea causing "subcutaneous emphysema." The air tracked into his tissues under his skin and also around his heart. He was sick as hell for a few days.
It should have been, as you say, a 'nothing,' but it became a BFD.
Boris was neutered on Thursday of last week, and he did great. It's almost as though nothing happened. He came home happy and hungry.
This morning, he seemed a little listless, and the first clue was that he didn't sleep with us. The second clue was when I went to feed him, he didn't seem ravenous. He hopped down from the desk he was sleeping on, and rubbed on my leg, a bit, when I popped the can of wet food. He ate about ΒΌ of the can, and went back to the desk...
Hmmm..
Just didn't look right.
I took him to our vet, and she diagnosed subcutaneous emphysema. Basically, this is a collection of air under the skin. It can occur in various situations. When you feel him, you can feel "pops" like bubble wrap (but much smaller, of course).
The most worrisome is an anaerobic bacterial infection. These bugs produce gas that collects under the skin. However, he had no fever, and the rest of his vitals were OK.Second cause is trauma. If he gets into a fight with another cat (Maggie still hasn't accepted him because he pesters her, a bite on the neck can cause a laceration of the trachea, allowing air to escape into the surrounding tissues. Blunt trauma, such as being hit by a car can do it too. A third possibility is that, during the neutering, he was intubated, and that caused a tracheal laceration. Seems like that's the most likely possibility.
Our vet seemed concerned enough that she recommended taking him to a place where they can give more "intensive" care for him, including monitoring, oxygen therapy, etc.
Usually, the treatment is just supportive - make him comfy with O2, pain meds. If he deteriorates, he might need surgery to repair a tracheal laceration.
The plan is to watch him for at least one (probably two) day to make sure he's not getting worse.
He sure looked miserable when we left.
He's had a horrible week, poor guy.
The red arrows point to the collections of air under his skin:
Geez, George!
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@taiwan_girl said in Today's encounter with health care:
Good news indeed. It'll be weeks/months before you really know. However, it sounds like it's a good thing so far.
Please keep us posted.
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Best wishes to your dog, Horace! That sounds awful for him, really miserable. Anything to do with the face is miserable for a human, so I would think it's as bad for a pet, too.
So glad you're able to move your thumb again. Use of your hand pretty much requires the thumb to participate fully and be social with the rest of the gang. Can you send your bill for this one to the doc who messed up the first time? Seriously, what recourse is there for you on the financial side for all this?
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@George-K said in Today's encounter with health care:
@brenda said in Today's encounter with health care:
what recourse is there for you on the financial side for all this
I'll bet zero.
"Shit happens" will be the response.
That's what I would expect, too. No guarantees are typically given for medical procedures.
Are there ever any exceptions?
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@brenda said in Today's encounter with health care:
That's what I would expect, too. No guarantees are typically given for medical procedures.
That's right. Your only recourse is legal.
When Boris had his trachea lacerated during his neutering, resulting in $2K of hospital bills, all I got was "Gee, we've never seen this before, sorry it happened."
At least he was insured.