Saturday, July 3, 2010

updates and a new toad

the snapper has recovered from her surgery and is doing ok right now. I'm hoping we can ward off infection with antibiotics and in a few months she'll be ready for release.

the toad unfortunately didn't have as good of an outcome.

she recovered well from that surgery (the stomach healed very nicely and she felt well enough to eat a grub on her own!) but she remained lethargic and didn’t pass any stool. To determine why she wasn’t fully recovered yet, we performed a barium study. A barium study is where you feed an animal a liquid that shows up bright white on xrays. Serial xrays are taken and you can see the barium as it passes through various parts of the gastrointestinal tract. Here is one taken ~ 1 hour after we fed her the barium. The blob on the right is barium in her stomach and you can see it snaking through the intestines to the left.sn852795.JPGwe continued to take xrays but after 24 hours the barium became stuck at the junction of the small intestine and colon.sn852805.JPGShe needed surgery again or she would die. So we went to surgery but unfortunately, the part of the intestine that had all the barium in it was extremely fragile and burst. She would have needed the fragile part of her intestine cut out and the two ends sewn together–but we couldn’t find why she became obstructed in the first place. It was decided to humanely euthanize her as the surgery she needed was very risky (high rate of failure) and we couldn’t guarantee she wouldn’t become obstructed again. it seemed unfair to put her through more pain when we couldn’t give her a good prognosis.

However, admist the poor outcomes are always several more happy and healthy ones!

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