calliecritturs
Posted : 12/19/2009 11:54:21 PM
Talk to the folks who have had this DONE. Outdoorschik had it done on Oliver and she will tell you what she did and what she wishes she had done.
SERIOUSLY go to a vet school -- it's worth the hours to get there (and I know whereabouts you are) -- but just a specialty vet, or a vet "whose done a lot of them" is NOT good enough.
Talk to Bevo's mom, Amanda -- she knows the GOOD vets (but more towards Houston I think). But truly you do NOT want just any vet doing these surgeries. And a specialist may charge out the ying yang and not necessarily be awesome. But Amanda can find out the best vet where you are,
I've got an arthritis article (it's not the same but pain management IS pain management) that will help you. If you do ANY nsaids at all, start milk thistle and use a TON of it.
glucosamine and chondroitin are not the same thing. some vets recommend combining them - some say use one or the other. But understand one thing -- both of them are "hydrators".
That means they "Plump up" (add water to) the cartilage in the joints. Now -- that's FINE ***if*** there is cartilage still there. Stop using it and it stops helping. Adequan is simply the pharmaceutical version of g/c (good company but pricey).
Honestly the first thing I'd tell you to start is Knox Nutra Joint (grocery store -- jello aisle -- likely on the top shelf. purple/organge can with an orange top) -- get the one with no Nutrasweet in it.
NutraJoint is essentially calcium and gelatin (which is ground up bovine cartilage) plus some nutrients/minerals. It actually puts the "stuff" (precise medical term?) at the body's disposal that it needs to RE-BUILD cartilage. It actually helps rebuild that cartilage.
Now -- understanding that hip dysplasia is an acual defect in the joint itself. The ball and socket don't fit properly together so when the joint moves the ball "rattles around" in the socket so it doesn't operate smoothly. Essentially the dog uses MUSCLE power to hold the ball in the socket. This is hard as heck on the joint and on the dog.
It wears the cartilage seriously because it's so jagged and ill-fitting.
Pain management is a big frigging deal. so is understanding how exercise is critical BUT you can't over-do it. Because it's a fine fine line between exercise to keep the muscles in tone and INFLAMMATION because the joint got too irritated. I can help you figure out the signs in the dog to watch for.
I would invest in a wagon -- she's a big girl -- I liked the Child's "Two Step" wagon we had for Muffin cos it had a door in the side so he could step up in rather than having to jump (or be lifted) and I just build a false bottom for it. The Radio Flyer one has fold down seats and goes flat on the bottom (it's what we use now)
WHY am I going on about this?
Because -- it's critical to STOP when she begins feeling pain. And if you're 12 blocks from home that's a problem. so honestly it's better to have the wagon so you can go essentially as far as you want -- but periodically let her ride and rest. Then ... let her walk a while ... but then ride and rest. Even if you only have her walk every other block -- it will help immensely. DON'T let her jump in and out of the wagon -- make some steps (blocks of plastic or hard foam rubber covered with carpet would work GREAT) so she doesn't have to 'jump' unless your'e expert in lifting her butt up in and helping her down out of the wagon.
She WILL learn to ride -- it's pretty easy and they get to really love it because they can 'go' they don't hurt and they are **with you** as far as you go. They don't feel bad because you "stopped" because they were hurting. (yeah, they get it -- trust me). Schlep your purse underneath or a bottle of water in the bottle holders and it becomes easy.
Email me and I'll give you that article ok? I can't pm it because it's a word doc.