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Health and nutrition How to feed a Wolfdog, information about dog food, how to vaccinate and what to do if the dog gets ill.... |
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02-10-2010, 21:35 | #1 |
Lobos de la Fuensanta
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Madrid
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It anesthetizes for HD
I have to do the X-ray photographies for HD and believe that it is necessary to use anesthesia. Does someone know if there are problems with certain anesthesias? Is it possible to use anyone?
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03-10-2010, 09:03 | #2 |
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Bad Dürkheim
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You can do a totally normal anaesthesia, there are no specialities in the breed.
Ina |
03-10-2010, 09:28 | #3 |
Distinguished Member
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Location: Kraków
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From what I was told by my vet, some csv are a bit "slower" than other dogs. It takes them longer to fall asleep and later to wake. So there is no need to give bigger doses, but just wait longer for the effect.
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03-10-2010, 09:40 | #4 |
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Our dogs needed quite high doses and woke up very soon but nothing really out of normal range.
Ina |
03-10-2010, 16:39 | #5 | |
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Location: Stockholm
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Quote:
Hronec my male, needs full dose, but did neeeeeeewer fall a sleep but he was very lazy... I anaesthesize him two times, it was the same thing time no two. Rasty my female vent under very fast a very deeeeeep, but she was also up very fast after the antidope... Hronec had a bit of a hangover, but Rasty was OK, just like normal... Anyone having more experience of anaesthesizeing a CsV please tell Very best regards / Mikael
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Last edited by Mikael; 03-10-2010 at 16:54. |
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03-10-2010, 18:29 | #6 |
Lobos de la Fuensanta
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Madrid
Posts: 61
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Thank you for your answers. I understand that it must go depending on the corporal weight of the dog, and as it happens to us costs mas and to others less. Is it like that?
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03-10-2010, 19:16 | #7 |
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Sorry, but I didn´t understand your question. Normally you give the drugs depending on the bodyweight and what you need to do. For a x-ray you don´t need a very deep anaesthesia because you cause no pain and simply need the muscle relaxation.
Ina |
05-10-2010, 02:26 | #8 |
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Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Florida & Minnesota U.S.
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Is full anesthesia required for HD films in your country?
Here in the US, you can anesthetize or not... personally, I prefer not... yes, there are some who feel it gives a less accurate reading (makes the hips look tighter than they are), but I get to go into the xray room and help hold my dog, relax them and make it a pleasant and less risky procedure. Even without anesthesia, you can clearly see the depth of the acetabulum, shape of the femoral head, etc... the only thing that cannot be evaluated as clearly is laxity... |
05-10-2010, 03:10 | #9 |
Howling Member
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I always tell my vet to use the same procedure they would for a greyhound/sighthound - another CSV breeder told me to do this early on, I don't know how much truth there is to it, but I think it makes my vet pay a little more attention for problems if nothing else. When I did PennHip (required anesthesia), the vet had a really hard time getting my female to go to sleep - both dogs tested had very quick recovery. She recently had a similar problem going to sleep when she had to have emergency surgery to put stitches in a wound. With greyhounds, they have some issues, I think because of little body fat (like many of our dogs, although probably not as much as a greyhound). There are certain types of medicine the vets will use, and others they will not for greyhounds...not sure of the names though. I have never had any serious problems.
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05-10-2010, 05:12 | #10 |
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When I was a Vet Tech, we prefered to use Diprivan (Propofol) to induce anesthesia, and then immediately switch them to the inhaled Isoflourane. Diprivan is also used in human anesthesia - when I worked in the human Operating Room, we called it "milk of amnesia" as it looks just like milk. As an aside, that is the drug that Michael Jackson ODed on.
Both were the safest drugs for the majority of critters. We used Ketamine in Cats for induction, but again, onto Isoflourane... Iso is very safe and metabolized very quickly, so as soon as they are off it, they come around in about 20 minutes, and very quickly regain normal consciousness. Depending on the procedure, though, a muscle relaxer and a narcotic are often administered (almost always the case in human anesthesia, but situation-dependent for critters). Proper anesthesia, in humans, is a combo of an "amnestic" (a drug that makes you unconscious and removes any memory of the event - like Diprivan), a "analgesic" - a pain reliever, like a narcotic, and a drug that relaxes EVERY uscle in your body - called a "paralytic" as it literally paralyses you) - to this day "Curare"- based paraytics are used (Curare is the "drug" that the poison frogs in the rain forest make that the native roll their dart tips in to paralyze prey). As a Tech, I mostly saw Diprivan and Isoflourane and for invasive procedures, a mild paralytic to reduce bleeding, inflammation and pain. Generally a narcotic injection followed the procedure, but not always. Nowadays, I INSIST my vet prescribe pain meds if the situation calls for it (like a spay). THey have been traditionally reticent to do so, resulting in severe discomfort for the poor critters... |
05-10-2010, 07:54 | #11 | |
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Quote:
Metedomidin is often used in combination with a little Ketamine and/or if necessary Propofol, because Metedomidin can be antagonized. As you need a Premedication for intubation that is already deep enough to do the x-rays that don´t take long Isofloran is not always used. Ina |
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05-10-2010, 16:47 | #12 |
Member
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Hi all, both my girls were fast to go into anesthesia and slow to wake up, I always thought it is the same for most wolfdogs. Looks like I was wrong ;o).
I am not a vet, but according to my experience anesthetizing rats with pentobarbital, the level of stress in the animal affects the dose needed for good anesthesia. With stressed out animals it is very hard to put them under...
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05-10-2010, 17:11 | #13 | |
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05-10-2010, 20:21 | #14 |
Lobos de la Fuensanta
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Madrid
Posts: 61
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First, thanks to all of you for your answers. Tomorrow it is I go to the veterinarian to test. I do not know what type of medicament it uses. It seems to be that in order that not of mistake the dog has to be totally relaxed especially because for some to come to the clinic supposes very much stress. For telephonic conversation I believe that it is an anesthesia and not relaxing.
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05-10-2010, 21:43 | #15 |
Howling Member
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PennHip = anesthesia mandatory, OFA = not mandatory (though usually used), part of the reason some people question it's reliability, since not all tests are performed with the same controls
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07-10-2010, 06:59 | #16 |
Lobos de la Fuensanta
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Madrid
Posts: 61
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Yesterday we went to the test and there has been luck, is "A", in hip and elbows. Primeramente injected a tranquilizer and later general anesthesia and him entubaron. What if it was late enough is to spend the effects of the anesthesia, when I went away to the bed had happened 2 hours since they woke him up and still seguia without being able to walk correctly and slept way.
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