My Photo

Make a donation

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz

July 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    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    

« July 2007 | Main | September 2007 »

August 20, 2007

Copper Kid: Not A Candidate For Surgery

Copper_kid_in_front_pasture

We got the word this evening in a phone call from Dr. Melissa Hines, chief of the Equine Medicine Service at Washington State University's College of Veterinary Medicine.  The myelogram on our wobbly horse, Copper Kid, did not show the areas where the spinal cord is compressed.  Both WSU's radiologist, who conducted the myelogram today, and Dr. Barrie Grant, the surgeon who would have done Copper's spine stabilization operation, could not detect the areas of compression on the myelogram images.  Without being able to identify them, surgery wasn't an option.  If you can't see them, you can't fix them.

This doesn't mean Copper doesn't have spinal cord compression.  The myelogram essentially takes a two-dimensional view, rather than a three-dimensional view as you would get from an MRI.  (Horses are too big for MRIs.)  The myelogram captures the ventrodorsal, or top-to-bottom, view of the spine, and if the compression is occurring only laterally, or side-to-side, it may not show it.  Dr. Hines had cautioned us last week, when I dropped Copper off at WSU, that even though it's rare, sometimes this happens.

In cases like Copper's where the myelogram does not reveal the compression, Dr. Hines said they routinely test the spinal fluid for a neurological disorder called EPM, or equine protozoal myeloencephalitis.  EPM is caused by a parasite and is not really endemic in our area.  Given Copper's history, clinical signs, and our location, it is very unlikely he could have EPM ... but you just never know.  It would actually be a good thing if he turned out to have EPM because it is treatable.  We will have those test results by Thursday this week.

If Copper doesn't have EPM, then all we can do is bring him back to the ranch, arrange a stall and pen for him where he can be safe and visit with his buddies over a fence, and then hope that nature will help stabilize him over time.  Our biggest concern will be winter, where the snow and ice can be treacherous for an animal that is neurologically impaired and unstable on his feet. 

The good news is that Copper was able to get up after the myelogram -- that was a big hurdle and a major worry, because the procedure can exacerbate the neurological instability.  Some horses have never been able to walk again afterwards.  So we were sweating that one.  Also, the WSU folks have now seen him lying down to sleep and getting up on his own (although he's a bit shaky doing it!).  We had not seen him sleeping lying down in the two weeks after he had the relapse.  Although horses can snooze standing up, at some point they really do need to lie down to get a deep sleep.  Thus we were relieved to hear he is now doing this.

I plan to head back to Pullman later in the week to pick him up.

The photo above I took a couple of years ago when Copper was able to trot around on pasture.  Here's the video again I took when Copper left the vet hospital a couple of weeks ago:

   

August 19, 2007

We Lost Old Peabody

Peabody_with_alayne_on_last_day

Peabody was already old and blind when he arrived at the ranch several years ago with an amazing story.  His tenacious zest for life -- even with a failing body -- was remarkable.  Two years ago he survived a stroke that we thought would surely do him in, yet he bounced back.  But in the past year he began to have more and more health problems, and increased difficulty getting up.  He would have his good days and his bad days.  And on the bad ones Alayne and I would look at dear Peabody and wonder if the time had come.

Yet he still loved to greet visitors, and he would trot off the Widget's House porch with his geriatric Shepherd shuffle to say hello.  He positively couldn't stand Travis, our dog with a fused jaw, and when he knew Travis had come out the door, Peabody would try to take off after him to give that young whipper-snapper a piece of his mind.  Despite his health problems and creaky body, Peabody still loved to eat, too.

So it was evident he continued to enjoy life, even with his ups and downs.

But in the middle of last week he started to lose interest in food.  He seemed morose and more rickety than normal.  On Friday Alayne noticed a few of the other dogs would go up to Peabody, sniff him, and then back away as if troubled.  When Alayne went over to Widget's House Friday night about 9:30 p.m. to put the dogs up, she found Peabody laying down in the yard.  Now, Peabody would rarely ever lie on a dog bed or cot; he almost always preferred the ground, which is the last thing his ancient body needed.

But when Alayne started stroking him, he didn't respond ... even though he was very much alive.  She tried to help him get up, but he couldn't stand.  It was almost like another stroke.  She called me for help.  I picked him up, got him to his feet and onto the porch, but he collapsed again.  His back legs weren't working, and his front legs were barely functioning.   We carried him inside and put him into a giant dog crate on a thick, soft bed.  Peabody is the only dog we've ever had who didn't like being crated, but he lay down on the bed in the crate and didn't stir.  He didn't seem to be in any pain, but he did look like he had given up.

On Saturday morning I pulled him out of the crate and helped him out to the porch.  He still couldn't walk.  I laid him down on the big round bed.  I hoped breakfast would make a difference, but it was clear his zest for life was now gone.  He looked miserable.  I knew the moment had come.

I took the photo above of Alayne with Peabody just before we lifted him onto the stretcher and carried him out to the truck.  I drove him to our vet clinic in Helena and got there around 11 a.m.  A few minutes later I was holding his old Shepherd head in my hands as he slipped away.

   

Smoked Out

Smoke_august_19

This is what our world looked like today.  Thick, acrid smoke right down to the valley floor.  We have been smoky for days ... really, weeks now ... from forest fires near and far.  We didn't think it could get any worse.  But it did, and this was as bad as it's been.  The winds came roaring in just as our visitors arrived for their tour this afternoon, driving more smoke into the valley. 

Smoked_out_ovando_mtn_aug_19 It was so thick we couldn't even see Ovando Mountain, which rises more than 7,000 feet just behind the ranch to the north.  The slopes of the peak start barely a mile from us.  Behind those trees you should see the mountain.  In a word:  Awful. 

Smoke_with_ovando_mountain_aug_2 For comparison's sake, here's a photo I took back on August 2nd, looking in the same direction towards Ovando Mountain.  We thought it was smoky then!

Yesterday a lightning bolt started a fire on the mountain to the east of us, and from the kitchen window last night we could watch it spot out ahead of itself, with new fires popping up.  All day today helicopters were in the air, picking up water in a nearby lake and dropping it on another small fire on the back side of Ovando Mountain. 

So far the animals are doing okay -- we haven't seen any respiratory issues yet from the smoke -- but we're just keeping our fingers crossed. 

August 16, 2007

The Bed Tester Takes On A Larger Project

Widget_testing_futon

Blind Widget, who has been named an honorary bed tester by West Paw Design, decided she needed to try her skills at something bigger.  Alayne and I had bought a futon sofa as a Christmas present for ourselves and just now got around to setting it up.  (Yep, that was last Christmas ... this is how our life goes!  It's been sitting in the wood shed for seven months.)  We ordered a futon sofa because we could put a waterproof mattress cover on it, so the incontinent gang like Bailey could sit on the couch with us. 

Widget_rubbing_on_futon Alayne had just opened the box and started putting the liner sheet on the mattress when you-know-who climbed up to check it out.  "I think you better have this thing tested before you go much farther," Widget seemed to be saying.  "You just never know."  In this shot Widget is performing the "rub-all-over-it" test.

Widget_side_testing_futon And here Widget is conducting the all-important "side support" test to make sure the bed comfortably supports her ample shoulders and hips and the rather expansive in-between part, too. 

Suffice to say that the futon mattress met all the criteria for a successful bed test.  The hardest part was simply rousting the sleeping bed tester so we could finish setting the mattress up.

(Click on photos for larger image.)

----

Copper Kid Update:  Dr. Hines from WSU called this afternoon to say Copper's myelogram has been rescheduled for Monday morning now.

----

August 15, 2007

Copper Kid Goes To The Teaching Hospital

Copper_kid_at_wsu

I drove Copper Kid, our young very wobbly horse, to Washington State University's veterinary teaching hospital today.  After watching him for the past couple of weeks confined to a stall and not getting any better after the sudden relapse of his Wobbler's Syndrome, we finally decided to pursue the surgical option for spine stabilization. I took this photo of 4th-year vet student Kate F. checking Copper's heart rate.  Kate was there to welcome us, check us in and take Copper's case history.

The first step is to find out if Copper is actually a candidate for surgery.  So Copper will have a myelogram done, a procedure in which a contrast fluid is injected into the spinal column and then X-rays taken as the fluid moves down the spine.  This process "illuminates" the trouble spots where the spinal cord is being compressed.  The equine surgeon who does this operation will review those images to determine if he thinks surgery can help.

There are risks to the myelogram procedure itself.  Because Copper is already very neurologically impaired, it's possible that the myelogram might worsen his condition.  He will also have to undergo general anesthesia, which is always a bit worrisome with large animals, let alone one with a neuro problem.

The internal medicine specialists I met with this afternoon at WSU, Dr. Macarena Sanz and Dr. Melissa Hines, also cautioned that in some cases the myelogram does not show the localized areas of cord compression -- and without being able to pinpoint them, the surgeon can't operate.

So we have quite a few hurdles to get over before we'll even know if surgery is truly an option.

If we can proceed to surgery, Dr. Sanz told me that in 80% of those cases, there is at least a one-grade improvement and in 40% of the cases, there is a two-grade improvement.  The scale ranges from Grade 1, barely noticeable, to Grade 5, recumbent and unable to get up.  Copper is a Grade 4 ... as bad as you can get and still walk.  Thus any improvement for him would make a huge difference. 

Of course, there is that other 20% of cases that see no improvement at all.

The myelogram is tentatively scheduled for this Friday.  Depending on when the surgeon can review the images, we may know as soon as that day ... or early next week.

If Copper becomes a candidate for surgery, we will launch a medical fund to help raise the money to pay the considerable cost of his operation.

In the meantime, please keep your fingers crossed for our youngster.  As wobbly as he was when we arrived at WSU this afternoon, it didn't stop this affectionate boy from nuzzling the vet students ... who of course loved him right back.  I warned Kate and her colleagues that Copper would try to sit in their laps if they let him.

(Click on photo for larger image.)

August 14, 2007

One Small Dog, One Big Back Seat

Oscar_in_back_of_truck

Alayne got this shot of old, deaf Oscar snoozing in his favorite place, our Dodge Ram 2500 pick-up truck.  This is the "Mega Cab" version of the Ram, and you can see why they call it that ... this is the back seat area, folded down.  We can actually set up a giant dog crate in there, it's that big.

And it's plenty big enough for a tiny miniature Dachshund who wants to sack out while his Mommy unloads ranch supplies.  Whenever Alayne is anywhere around the truck, Oscar races to get inside.  He loves going for a ride, but if the truck's not going anywhere, why, there's no better place for a nap.

(Click on photo for larger image.)

August 13, 2007

They're Missing Bones But Not Spirit

Two_kittens

In addition to Blanca, here's what also arrived this past weekend:  Two adorable 12-week old kittens who came to us from the Panhandle Animal Shelter in Sandpoint, Idaho.  The shelter had named them Spazzy -- that's him on the left -- and his sister Teeny.  They were born with missing bones in their rear legs -- it looks like both the tibia and fibula are simply not there.  Perhaps as a result of that, their back feet are upside down and backwards ... notice how Spazzy's left rear foot is positioned.

When we hold them up in the air, their rear legs just dangle and kind of spin around.  And yet ... put these two on the ground, and they can get around just fine.  Teeny does a modified bunny hop while Spazzy scoots around at a blur.

The shelter had placed these two with a foster mom, Nicki D., who emailed us with some background on them.  In her message she wrote, "So basically, these guys are hardly any different than taking care of a normal cat. Except that they are disfigured, and people start talking euthanasia and removal of limbs around them."  (Nicki's emphasis.)

Nicki also told us that Spazzy is the "great adventurer" while Teeny is "a dreamer."  They are both sweet and affectionate, and Teeny just starts purring as soon as she sees you. 

But ... I think it's time for a name-the-kittens contest!  Please post your name suggestions on the blog, and if we pick your names, we'll send you either a Rolling Dog Ranch hat or a set of our greeting cards ... your choice!

Here's some video of this duo that I shot in my office this afternoon.  You'll see that except for those back legs, these two are happy, healthy and spunky little guys.

   

August 12, 2007

All The Way From Mexico, Here's Blanca

Blanca_with_alayne

We had hoped Claude would live long enough to meet this little girl, but he died two days before Blanca arrived at the ranch.  And if you're doing a double-take, it's because she's a Great Dane puppy, too, who looks uncannily like him.  She's also the exact same age -- 4 months -- that Claude was when he came to us.  Like Claude, she was born with microphthalmia, which means her eyeballs are malformed and not functional.  She's completely blind in her left eye (there really isn't anything there) but she can see -- we think -- shapes and shadows from her shrunken right eye.  She's also completely deaf.

Blanca_in_yard When Blanca's owner in Guadalajara, Mexico, asked us a few weeks ago if we could take Blanca, we knew that Claude wouldn't have much longer to live.  So we thought it would be a wonderful way to honor him by letting another blind Great Dane puppy take his place.  We just wanted him to still be with us when she arrived, but that was not to be.

Blanca was one of 18 puppies born on April 1st to a Great Dane named Manta.  Manta's owner is Rosanna M., an American citizen living in Guadalajara.  Rosanna had hoped to keep the beautiful white puppy she named Luna, but finally concluded that she didn't have the right environment to care for a puppy with these kinds of disabilities.  In Guadalajara, Rosanna's options were limited.  Even the veterinary ophthalmologist she took the puppy to see had said Rosanna should put the dog down. 

Rosanna and I spent a lot of time these past couple of weeks trying to figure out how to fly the puppy out of Mexico and up to Montana.  It's not easy!  Most of the U.S. airlines flying out of Guadalajara or nearby Puerto Vallarta either wouldn't transport animals from Mexico, or they stopped first in places like Los Angeles, meaning you have to clear customs, then re-book the animal for the onward journey.  Finally an Alaska Airlines employee told me that Aeromexico had a flight from Guadalajara to Seattle and would transport animals. 

Blanca_side_view So Rosanna called Aeromexico, booked a ticket for herself and the baby Dane, and on Saturday a week ago they flew to Seattle.  On Sunday, Rosanna drove over to our old neighborhood in Bellevue to drop the puppy off with a wonderful friend of ours, Bindy O., who does pet sitting and also works in our former veterinary clinic.  Bindy took great care of this little girl for us all of last week.  Then yesterday, another set of Seattle friends and supporters of the sanctuary, Jan R. and Wayne S., brought her out to Montana for us.

(And that's not all they brought out.  Jan and Wayne stopped in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, to pick up two more animals for us who came from the Panhandle Animal Shelter in Sandpoint.  But I'm saving those two for tomorrow's blog post!)

Although we liked the name 'Luna,' we already have an animal with the same name ... our blind mare Luna from Colorado ... so we decided to call this adorable puppy Blanca.  Because she's deaf, it doesn't really matter to her, but it will keep us from getting confused!

I will admit that when I saw Blanca for the first time yesterday, I teared up.  She looks so much like Claude when he was that age that you could mistake them for twins.  But this is how the 'circle of life' goes for us:  We lose one young life on Thursday, and on Saturday another young life arrives.

(Click on photos for larger image.)

August 09, 2007

We Lost Claude Today

Claude_on_his_last_day

He didn't even make it through the second summer of his tragically short life.  We lost our blind Great Dane Claude today to his Wobbler's Syndrome.  When the end came, it came fast.

Back on July 4th, I posted an update on Claude and said he was still going strong.  We were managing his neurological disease medically, and he was showing few signs of his Wobblers.  But a week after I posted that, he began wobbling again ... first a little, then a lot.  After consulting with our veterinarians, we increased his dosage on the medication.  It helped a bit, for a while.  Yet he increasingly had difficulty getting up and down, and he would fish-tail occasionally when walking.  His face became puffy, his hair coarse and his skin dry.  He developed sores on his legs.  These were all consequences of the prednisone therapy.  He started looking like he just didn't feel well.

Then, two days ago, he went down and couldn't get up.  When we helped him up, he'd walk a short ways and then start sinking to the ground.  And although he continued to eat, his breathing began sounding labored.  He looked unhappy.  The spark was gone.  We could just look at his face and see it.  We knew the time had come.

At noon today Alayne and I placed a soft fleece blanket on the stretcher, lifted Claude onto it, and carried him out to the truck.  I took the photo of Claude just before Alayne drove him to our vet clinic in Helena, Montana Veterinary Specialists.  There our primary care vet, Dr. Brenda Culver, brought his young life to a gentle, dignified and peaceful end.  He was barely 15 months old. 

Goodbye, Claude.  We love you.

August 08, 2007

Shade-Man Changes His Tree

Bailey_under_aspen

It was just about three weeks ago that I posted a photo of Bailey enjoying a siesta in his favorite shady spot, under the cottonwood tree at the front of the house.  Well, starting last week Bailey selected a new favorite shady spot, this one under the aspen tree at the back of the house.  Apparently the cottonwood spot was so...well...last month.  It's a new month, requiring a new tree.

Bailey began spending so much time under the aspen, just sitting on the rocks, that Alayne ended up putting a dog bed under the tree for him.  (At least under his cottonwood he had grass to lie on!) 

We don't know why our little arborist decided to change trees, but he did.  I took this photo of him lying there yesterday.  I think the only thing missing from this scene is a man-servant standing over Bailey, fanning him with palm fronds.  (Hey, listen, I was busy!)

(Click on photo for larger image.)