Coming home from surgery!

We picked up our sweet baby today.  He was very excited to see us!

Dr. Matz, Dr. Lee and 4th year Katie met us and answered our questions before we made the trek back to our home, 2.5 hours away.  Here is the takeaway:

Surgery was challenging but it went well.  The surrounding tissues looked great, except his urethra was touching the tumor.  They were able to “peel” (OMG) it away and he is urinating normally.  Whew!  We are now waiting on biopsy results.  In all likelihood, we are looking at Osteosarcoma, but I’m hoping for “random benign dumb tumor”.  Glass half full, right?

Eider is from a hunting line of labs, both parents imported from the UK.  To say he is energetic is the understatement of the year.  Wiggly, happy, silly! So, yeah, he is on a sedative.  Poor little guy.  We are on Rimadyl, Tramadol, Trazodone and Clavamox.  The surgeons cultured his incisions as they realized the operation was going WAY past the presumed time.  Cultures were looking fine as of this morning, so hopefully we won’t see any infection.

He has a lidocaine patch at the incision site and a bandage that our local vet, Dr. Eiland, will change for us 2 more times.  They insisted upon crate rest and the dreaded cone of shame if he is alone, for at least 2 weeks.  I inquired about the gabapentin, but they did not seem to feel it was necessary.

We are home in our temporary bedroom/livingroom hybrid and he immediately hopped onto the mattress (which is directly on the floor) and has been sleeping since 11:30.  So glad he is resting!

I want to blog about this so other people can learn. Sooooo, here are the photos of our little pup as of today:

Standing On the people bed Favorite blanket

 

His manly bits are swollen as well as his back leg.  His appetite is in full effect and his tail is wagging!

More updates after I get some rest….

Something was “off”….

Eider

 

In early March 2016, our 6 year old male, neutered Labrador Retriever was having trouble defecating.  We assumed he was constipated and brushed it off, when he finally pooped a day or so later.  A week went by of “life”…work, nightly walks (so we weren’t seeing his poops in the light), etc.  The next weekend, he was having trouble again.  When he finally pooped, it came out in a flat, ribbon-like shape.  So, Tuesday March 22nd, I was growing concerned that he might have an enlarged prostate OR an anal sac/gland issue.  I arranged to take off work Wednesday March 23rd to take him to our vet.  Dr. Syms came in to see us and I told him my thoughts and he took Eider back for a rectal exam.  He came back a little too fast and said “I need to take X-rays.”  I said “go for it”.  After a bit, Dr. Syms came back in and said,

“I don’t have anything good to say to you.”

…and directed me out to the computer monitors to see the x-ray.

There it was:  a softball size mass on the inside of his pelvic bone.  A cloudy monster pushing on his rectum.  Hence the flat poop.  *sigh*

We live in Alabama and he said “Do you want to go to Auburn? [University]”  I said “make the appointment”.  He came back and said “Monday at 11am”.

I called my husband and told him to come home from work.  We immediately took some valuables of the 2nd amendment variety and sold them to a pawn shop.  We bought a GoPro camera and filmed our dogs non-stop for the next 5 days.  We had so much fun!  Lots of swimming, fetching, car rides, napping, chilling’.  You name it, we filmed it.

Monday came around and we arrived at Auburn University Veterinary Hospital aka Bailey Small Animal Hospital.

Car Ride to Auburn Car snugles

 

We met with an Oncology resident, a 4th year student, a Surgical Resident and a Surgical Oncology Attending-Dr. Matz.  They ordered more x-rays to check the lungs and also did a CT scan.  No visible metasteses, but the tumor was very large and in a bad location.  The only action to take was a “Right mid to caudal partial pelvectomy” aka Hemipelvectomy.  They scheduled him for the next day and we left our little baby man in their care.

Tuesday morning crawled by and they told us he was going under the knife at 1pm.  The surgeons had anticipated a 4 hour procedure so we kept waiting for a call.  5pm came and went.  Then 6pm.

Then 7pm.  The phone finally rang.  He was out of surgery and it went well!  I sat down in the kitchen floor and sobbed into a dish towel while hubs called the GrandPawrents to let them know.

Wednesday, Thursday and Friday were all met with phone calls from Katie, the 4th year offering us great reports of his recovery.  He was sweet, albeit a little exuberant and was ready to tackle life on 3 legs!

We scheduled to pick him up Saturday 4.2.16 and we couldn’t wait!  I gathered advice from the TriPawd family and we went into action Friday night:

-rugs on all surfaces

-baby gate to block off bedroom side of the house

-mattress on floor in den so we can all sleep in the same room, but not have to walk so far!

-Ruffwear harness adjusted and boxer shorts neatly folded

-blankets and towels washed and ready

-favorite toy washed and, well… put away for now HA!

All we had to do was pretend to sleep and then go pick up our little man.  So, that’s what we did next…