Today is Day 4 and what a difference. First thank you to everyone for advice and feedback on the pain, I think a lot of his issues were actually side effects. I need to keep reminding myself that dogs are not humans and the side effects are different, I always find myself thinking of my patients and none have ever complained of wimpering or panting from pain meds! Now that would be interesting.
Morgan’s appetite has returned after about 3 weeks of lack of hunger. It has been so great to see him happy to eat again and look for food. Pain is much better and his mobility is so much improved. Now time to work on not licking the staples, luckily he let me reapply the bandage yesterday. Morgan does not handle “the cone” at all thanks to his anxiety that we just can’t go there. He’s also enjoying the daily ice sessions, just relaxing as Matt ices his incision, so far so good no signs of seroma!
Today was his first walk in weeks and the happiness was huge! We only went about 1/2 mile and by the end he was slowing. It is just great to be back out again and know that there is more to come as he gets stronger. 10 days until staple removal and recheck of the lungs and post-surgery cough…
 This all changed in early August 2013, he spent a week being ill with gastrointestinal junk then soon after stopped putting weight on his right rear leg. Since he was always running, jumping and playing we went with the assumption he injured his leg. The vet agreed and nothing was looking too terrible on exam, we started some pain meds and encouraged rest. The leg continued to worsen and we returned the the vet on September 6th. After more exam we were about to leave with a consult to orthopedics and impending knee surgery but the vet had a feeling and requested a repeat X-ray to show more of Morgan’s femur. There it was, the cause of the knee swelling…a large growth on his right distal femur which we assumed was osteosarcoma. Talk about life being quickly flipped upside down. I immediately called the oncology department at The University Vet Center and we took the soonest appointment on September 23rd.
This all changed in early August 2013, he spent a week being ill with gastrointestinal junk then soon after stopped putting weight on his right rear leg. Since he was always running, jumping and playing we went with the assumption he injured his leg. The vet agreed and nothing was looking too terrible on exam, we started some pain meds and encouraged rest. The leg continued to worsen and we returned the the vet on September 6th. After more exam we were about to leave with a consult to orthopedics and impending knee surgery but the vet had a feeling and requested a repeat X-ray to show more of Morgan’s femur. There it was, the cause of the knee swelling…a large growth on his right distal femur which we assumed was osteosarcoma. Talk about life being quickly flipped upside down. I immediately called the oncology department at The University Vet Center and we took the soonest appointment on September 23rd.
