A Charlie update

    • Gold Top Dog

    A Charlie update

    I haven't done an up date on Charlie's eyes in a long time -- he had his 6 month check up today and the vet was really happy with it.  so I'll try to tell enough of the background for those who don't "know" him and generally what's up.

    This isn't the best picture but it shows both eyes well -- his left eye is merely cloudy -- he HAS pretty darned good vision in that eye.  The cloudy appearance is *not* a cataract -- it's edema and moisture in the eye (because the surgery in that eye to remove the cataract was particularly difficult).

    Anyway -- Charlie's eye surgery was about 17 months ago.  For those who weren't around then Charlie had such old cataracts he was blind in both eyes when we got him.  We planned -- from the first second of knowing about him -- to have the surgery done.  (Long story short -- Charlie was abandoned in a flooded house during Hurricane Irene 2 years ago - folks got out themselves and took the pregnant pug they wanted to sell the puppies -- but they left behind the blind dogr in a house flooded up above the 2d story????) 

    For those who have never dealt with cataracts (it's the same in humans as it is in dogs actually) -- any time there are catarcts, there is **always** the risk of glaucoma.  Even *after* the cataracts are removed, the risk of glaucoma is always there so any dog with cataracts honestly should have their eyes examined **at least** annually simply because if glaucoma is present it's hugely painful and it can cause the eye to rupture. 

    Anyway - -that's just all stuff *I* never knew.  I wasn't living at home when my folks had their cataract surgeries so I was essentially just plain ignorant.  Probably the BIGGEST shock to me was the hellacious amount of EYE DROPS (hear the Twilight Zone theme music here -- it is weird territory!!). 

    Phew -- right after his surgery he literally had 6 different types of eye drops and ointments and they had to go in like three times a day but they all had to have like 20 minutes between them ... sheesh -- you'd have thot the only thing anyone had to do was put drops in the dog's eyes???

    It's probably one of the many reasons (not to omit cost) that cataract surgery on dogs isn't "run of the mill". 

    OK -- all that to say this:

    David took Charlie for his 6 month appt this morning -- YAY -- **no more pressure drops!!!!!!**

    Those were the ones that are used for glaucoma -- and while the eyes are healing they do them to help the eyes heal properly I guess.  He was on a much stronger pressure drop at first ... gradually they weaned him back to twice a day on those and then dropped him to timobal which is a less strong pressure drop. 

    As of today -- no more timobal!!! YAY

    He still gets a prednisolone drop once every other day and he gets an ointment in the cloudy eye twice a day (that is supposed to gradually help that cloudy eye altho they're sure that eye will always be cloudy).

    For whatever it's worth to anyone (again -- I had NO CLUE what occurred in any sort of cataract surgery -- human or dog!) -- if you remove cataracts early the goal is to break up the cloudy lens and remove it -- leaving the little membrane "envelope" inside the eye intact -- THEN they slip a prosthetic lens in that membrane envelope and vision is incredibly good.

    Because Charlies cataracts were so OLD (he was like 7 when we got him and the cataracts appeared when he was about 18 months old (it's a Cavalier thing) -- that membrane envelop was thick and battle-scarred from the long-term inflammation/irritation the cloudy lenses cause.  so they had to cut out that membrane envelop during the surgery (he couldn't have seen *thru* it). 

    The way they explained it to us -- it's essentially like our vision where we are far-sighted (you can't read the newspaper but you can drive just fine???). 

    That pretty well defines his vision -- the closer he is to something the less clear he sees it, but he **DOES** see,  And he sees quite well out of that cloudy eye as well.

    • Gold Top Dog

    Yea for Charlie!!!  I am so happy to hear that he is doing so well.   I thing Charlie  deserves a new toy!

    • Gold Top Dog

    But Ginger -- should it be red ... or pink ... or orange .. or ... maybe RED ...or PINK or ... even ORANGE???

    Yes, he's still SO drawn to color.  it really is hysterical -- I've always been told how pretty much color blind dogs are -- and they don't "see" color the way we do.  

    But I tell you -- I've seen him go all over the house to snag ALL the red plush bones ... or ALL the pink ones.  It is pretty danged funny actually -- he matches better than Imelda Marcos used to "match" her zillion pairs of shoes!!

    We saw that right after the cataract surgery -- this incredible preference for bright reds ... and neon pink and orange.  

    • Gold Top Dog

    LOL

    @calliecritturs
    But Ginger -- should it be red ... or pink ... or orange .. or ... maybe RED ...or PINK or ... even ORANGE???

    I remembered that he loved toys but completely forgot about his love of color :)  How is he handling all the rain this summer? 

    • Gold Top Dog

    Yay for charlie and yay for you and David for doing this! Interestingly I read an article once that said many retrievers are far sighted from birth because of what they were bred to do ... see birds and stuff far away. Not sure if true but thought was interesting .

    • Gold Top Dog

    Well, bright neon colors are super stylish in some fashion circles, so Charlie is just making a statement!  What a sweet face he has.

    What a commitment you guys made with all that eye-dropping.  He's a super lucky boy to have found his way to the best dog Mom and Dad ever!

    So, his cloudy left eye has the limited vision you described.  But his right eye, although it looks "normal" has no vision at all?  That's interesting.  

    Our neighbors' dog is nearly blind now and his eyes look a bit cloudy to me (not like Charlie's, but it's visible from certain angles).  I feel bad for him, but he seems to do okay -- he knows his way around the house and yard, even if he doesn't come running up to me with the recognition he used to have.

    Anyway, snuggles to Charlie, and a big round of "apaws" to you and David for being such diligent eye-dropper givers.  Yay for fewer drops!

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    Nooo Tracy -- the other eye is GREAT!!  It was only the one eye that reacted with the edema.  Both eyes were difficult surgeries but it's only the one that shows the cloudiness.  He sees pretty danged well out of the clouded one and even better out of the other!!  Sorry if I was confusing!

    The vet's plan was to put the prosthetic lenses in and she couldn't because that membrane envelope was too damaged.  That happens a whole lot with people too (neither my Mom nor Dad have the prosthetic lens)

    The typical cloudiness you see in a dog's eyes is usually cataracts.  This is different.  I've had people ask if he was blind in that eye and he's not at all!  

    The early onset cataracts *is* a breed-related health issue in some Cavaliers.  But given that his heart is *great* (and that's the really really worrisome Cavalier trait) the cataracts were at least treatable.  

    i'll tell you -- the first couple of months those eye drops ... phew.  That was probably the ONE thing that I'll complain about with this big eye vet specialist group we went to.  They did *not* prepare us well for what the aftercare would be.  Given that David is an hour from work and I'm 40 minutes from work during traffic -- the fact that one of us HAD to go home during the day to give him the eye drops (and one of us had to get up during the night to give them) ... wow -- it was not a nice thing to get thrown at us after the surgery was over.   And I honestly suspect they deliberately do NOT tell people because they think it will discourage people from having the surgery.

    The really intense gazillion eye drops only went on about 2 months thankfully.  

    **And Ginger** -- Charlie is **not** impressed with all the rain.  I mean yuck!!!

    But beyond that -- we had gotten our sprinkler system back on-line recently ... and poor Charlie had the rudest awakening of all!!

    I mean -- if it isn't bad enough that evil water falls from the SKY ... (it **will** wash your world away yo know!!)

    But WHAT is up with this???  a poor little spaniel innocently goes walking across the grass and SUDDENLY this thing pops up from the ground and SQUIRTS WATER straight up in the air!!!!!  It makes it go up SO high that it turns around and falls back down to the ground again??? I mean come ON .... isn't evil rain enuf???  What did a little spaniel DO to deserve this??? It's rude ... it's ... terrible ... it's ...

    I AM NOT g going out there at THIS time of night b/c it's when the evils squirt thingamys are on!!!!!

    It's probably a good thing the food is good and he likes David and I ... because there are certain things in Flooorda that are just plain difficult.  crunchy grass -- weirdo tress -- and .. squirty water!!

    • Gold Top Dog

    Poor charlie and the evil sprinkler!!!

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    That shoulda been weird **trees** LOL --

    And it's funny -- he takes a bath with NO problem.  But that's what happens when you live thru a flood - water is just going to fill up your world and wash it away!!