Newsletter Summer 2013
Transcription
Newsletter Summer 2013
! MAY- AU G U ST 201 3 N E W S L E T T E R! Ashlea Veterinary Centre 2013 PHOTO COMPETITION The search is on for the Face of 2013 for Ashlea Vets. In the past we have been inundated with entries, and have had a hard time choosing winners, but are we are keen to see your photos in three categories Dogs, Cats and Rabbits. Winners will get a goodie hamper as well as their pet’s photo being on all our booster cards. Ashlea Vet Centre Ltd Unit 2b Port Road Business Park Carlisle CA2 7AF Tel: 01228 549177 www.ashleavets.co.uk www.facebook.com/ashleavets Surgery Times Mon, Tues & Thurs 9am - 6.30pm Wed & Fri 9- 6pm Saturday 9am - 3pm Consultation by appointment only For emergency advice or attention beyond these hours phone the practice on 01228 549177 and listen to the message for the duty vets number Last years winners were the handsome Barney Curley and the beautiful Lily Morris (above). We’ve added a rabbit category this year too, so all rabbit owners get your cameras working or dig out your favourite photos! Get your photos to us at [email protected] by the 31st August. If you don’t have access to email you can simply drop your photos in to the surgery. We can’t wait to see all your entries! We may use your photos for other publicity including Facebook. For full terms and conditions see our website. Below are some photos of a rather unusual pet, Tuff Gong, the 15 year old Iguana. She came in as she had a large abscess on the side of her lower lip. We had to empty out the abscess, x-ray her jaw and take a blood sample to check how her kidneys were doing before putting her on antibiotics to resolve the infection. TUFF GONG, BY LOOKING FROM THE TOP OF HER HEAD YOU CAN SEE THE OPENING OF THE ABSCESS ON HER LEFT LOWER LIP. TUFF GONG’S XR-AY OF HER JAW SHOWING US THAT THE INFECTION HADN’T SPREAD TO HER BONES. Veterinary Surgeons Chris Barker MRCVS Kirsty Barker MRCVS Morag Liddon MRCVS Laura Askew MRCVS Receptionists Christine Coulthard Karen Steele Nurses Rowena Batey VN Katy Clarke VN Rachael Scholes VN Lauren Batey VN Student Nurses Stephanie Cowgill Ruth Asquith Hannah Mason Practice cat ‘Abby’ TUFF GONG POSING FOR A PHOTO WITH RUTH ONE OF OUR STUDENT NURSES. WHILE YOU ARE ASLEEP Have you ever wondered what happens when our surgery closes? Well the vets and the nurses at Ashlea Vets are taking their turn to be on call, so that if you and your pet need help in an emergency we can be there for you. We don’t stay at the surgery, but we are on the other end of the phone for any advice you might need, or to meet you at the surgery if your pet needs attention. All vets have a professional duty to ensure out of hours (OOH) emergency care for their clients. OOH provision has changed dramatically in the last 10 years - originally every practice provided its own cover but in big cities specialised companies now provide the OOH service. In other areas, including Carlisle, some practices have chosen to contract out their OOH work to another practice, meaning that their clients will have to travel to another surgery or another town for emergency attention. SUNSHINE AND SUNCREAM As summer approaches we need to be vigilant, making sure our pets are as prepared as they can be. Whatever pet you have you will need to make sure there is plenty of fresh, cool water available and shady places for them to hide from the sun. Make sure pets aren’t trapped in places that are likely to heat up beyond a comfortable and safe temperature. We have all seen the campaigns about dogs left in cars but remember conservatories too. Don’t forget bunnies and guinea pigs need shade too. All dogs are susceptible to a condition known as heat At Ashlea Vets we believe passionately that we should be there if stress but especially the you need us in an emergency, in a building with which you and your brachiocephalic breeds, pet are familiar with full access to your pet’s clinical records. We that is ones who have a are only on call for our clients and as a 100% pet animal practice short nose or flat face, for there will always be a familiar vet and nurse available when an example a pug or a boxer, emergency happens - 365 days a year, 24 hours a day. OOH calls as their respiratory are unavoidably expensive because of the manpower required to system is already to an The sun often isn’t fun for our pets. extent compromised. So cover all the hours, but members of all our in-house healthcare schemes get a 20% discount on the emergency call out fee. If you too are very young or old have an emergency then phone the normal surgery number - have a dogs or those who are overweight or suffer from pen and paper to hand as the answering machine will give you the cardiovascular or respiratory phone number of our duty vet. problems. Because dogs can’t release heat by sweating the way Recent OOH cases have included - a road traffic accident involving a we humans do, heat and humidity puppy in severe shock with chest injuries, a cat needing attention on a can raise body temperature to Sunday afternoon with a blocked urinary bladder, a mountain rescue dangerous levels. To help prevent dog seen with a cut to it’s eye after a day on the fells, and at 2am one heat stress walk your dog in the morning a cat in extreme pain, unable to use its back end due to a shade or at cooler times of the clot in the blood vessels supplying the hind legs. All in all a very day and maybe consider taking busy weekend! water with you using a portable The vast majority of emergencies will be best seen at the practice ... water bowl. Symptoms can but sometimes all you will need is some reassuring advice over the include profuse panting and A brachiocephalic dog. phone. We’ll be there for you! salivation, an anxious expression, staring without seeing, failing to respond to commands, skin that is warm and dry, fever, rapid pulse, fatigue or exhaustion, muscular weakness, and physical collapse. Reduce your dog’s temperature by moving her into shade and immersing her gradually into cool water. PUPPY PARTIES Cats can also suffer We think it is important that your new puppy gets the best start to from heat stress but are life. At Ashlea Vets we not only make sure they receive a full check more likely to seek a over, with advice on everything you might need to know to care for cool place; you just need This cat will need your new addition, but also help you with socialisation and to make sure that such a sunscreen on it’s ears training. So when you come to us for your puppy’s primary place is available. Cats with vaccinations you will be able to attend our puppy classes. white ears can also suffer from sunburn as the hair on the These consist of a three week course run by our tips of the ears tends to qualified veterinary nurses where your TRUT be sparse - so apply a puppy can play and socialise with other OR M H high factor Y TH? puppies of their own age. You’ll get a great Yo u have suncream or start to training, learning sit, lie down, heel and pet a to fee sunblock in d the start of recall. There are course notes and mixt y ure o o ur the summer to t i n n each week your puppy will be weighed and have e biscu d an d f prevent burns a basic exam. We’re sure you and your puppy it fo o d. which could will enjoy the sessions while allowing us to eventually develop into MY T This cat has sunburn and begin a lifelong process of investing in you and H a type of skin cancer called early squamous cell your pet with shared happy experiences1 squamous cell carcinoma. carcinomas on its ear tips. ABBY’S VIEWPOINT Thank you so much for your support of our charity events last year. Our charities for 2012 were Eden Valley Hospice, Motor Neuron Disease North West, International China Concern and Brooke Animal Hospital. We raised £2023 last year and received some lovely letters thanking us for the money we have distributed. So far this year we have had a cake and marmalade sale Comic relief fun for Comic Relief where we raised £340 and with the the practice donating £1 for every transaction on Red Nose Day the total raised came an impressive £400. The Ashlea Vet Quiz took place on the 24th March and we raised a huge £730. A great time was had by all as 26 teams competed for the title and the many gifts generously donated to Some of you may have seen a cat sitting at reception when you’ve brought your own pet in recently; for those of you who haven’t been introduced - please meet Abby! She was found on Wigton Road in September 2012. There were wounds to both back legs which took a long time to heal, her right leg especially had a lot of deeper damage to tendons. Some of the damage is irreversible and she still has skin problem but happily licks her Metacam from the end of a syringe each day giving her the pain relief she needs. She’s an older lady but there was a vacancy for a practice cat so we are more than happy to give her a home here! Her attitude suits her tortoiseshell markings we think she assumes that she lets us all work in her home each day and not the other way round! She’s holds court in the staff room where she can ensure maximum attention We have our Cake Bake planned The winning team from us, but does wander around when it’s for 3rd -15th June this year so get quieter and once even dived in the box of toy mice preparing your best Mary-Berry-worthy cakes. If baking on the reception desk, picked the one she wanted and brought it back to her bed, leaving the rest scattered all isn’t your strong point make sure you call in to buy some over reception! We’ve decided to let her have her own of the yummy cakes on display! Cake bake column to let you know what going on in the practice... inspiration Some of our staff are mad “So those people that I let work in my practice have enough to have entered into Total Warrior in August. mentioned something about earning my keep and writing about what’s going on round here... The most It’s called the toughest 10km with 25 punishing obstacles. important thing is that my leg is itchy again and I We will be raising money as part of a team for Total Warrior started licking it and now it’s got a big scab. International China Concern and will needs lots of They keep putting cream on it and making me wear this stupid collar around my head encouragement. Training has begun but we’ve a long way to go! but I suppose it is getting a bit better. Don’t One of our clients knits us amazing teddies tell them but I spend a lot of my time fast asleep in the staff room, but when I’m awake and headbands that we sell to raise money. I’ve noticed a few changes. They seem to Laura bought one of the Hello Kitty teddies have been busy, not just with all the other and a grey headband to send to Ci Ci, the child cats and dog that come in but decorating all the walls in Reception. I wasn’t sure about she sponsors in China through International the smell of paint but I’ve got to admit it looks China Concern. It was very well received! good now. They’ve also got some new toys and things in the pet shop. I chose a lovely We would love to hear any pink and black toy off the shelf when no one CiCi with her toys suggestions for fundraising ideas and was looking but they’ve let me keep it. for charities we could support in 2013 and beyond. Katy with Lily and Izzy There appears to be two new people around the practice as well... One of them, Karen, We have totaled up how much we’ve raised over the years and were sits on the front desk a lot so I’ll have to get past her if I staggered that we’ve raised £10,023 in the last 10yrs. So thank you and want some new toys. The other one, Katy, apparently well done; it’s only because of your generous donations that it’s been possible. went off for a while to have a baby, I’ve heard people say he’s cute and I think he’s called Samuel but I’m not a WELCOMING KAREN TO THE PRACTICE huge fan of little people myself. Katy seems nice... For those of you who haven’t heard, after fifteen but she does have two years Christine Stalker has moved on following a dogs. The only other new fantastic win on ITV’s ‘Red or Black’. She has thing is there seems to be bought and is now running a sandwich shop on a shiny new toy called an Rosehill Estate - "Stalkers Food 4 Thought." ultrasound machine, can’t see how to work it myself And so we have had to seek a replacement and but I guess it’s good we have found the lovely Karen. She started with they’ve got the latest us at the beginning of February and is settling in technology in case I get ill!” quickly. Karen has two Westies called Angus and Me stealing a toy Millie and in her spare time enjoys fell walking. Karen with Angus the raffle. The winning team was the interestingly named ‘Richard Gere’s Hamster’. Thank you to all who took part! and Millie sssshhh don’t tell! CHARLIE’S BLOCKED BLADDER We have known Charlie since he was as tiny kitten in 2008. His owners signed him up to the Healthcare Plus scheme at his first vaccinations but apart from a slight tummy upset early in 2012 he was fit and healthy; we simply saw him every 6 months for his flea and worming treatment and once a year for his booster vaccination. All was well until June 2012 when his owners brought him in to the A male cat’s urinary anatomy clinic, lethargic and unresponsive. We diagnosed him as having a blocked urethra, the tube that goes from the bladder to the end of the penis. This condition can be life-threatening and is always considered an emergency. We had to anaesthetise Charlie so we could unblock him by a passing a catheter up his urethra, flushing with saline to remove the Handsome Charlie! obstruction. The catheter was left in place to allow any more obstructions to pass easily while any swelling or spasm of the urethral wall subsided. Testing Charlie’s urine showed struvite crystals which can clump together to form an obstructive sediment; this can block the urethra anywhere from the bladder neck to the tip of penis. It is usually only male cats that ‘block’ as the urethras of dogs and female cats are both wider and less tortuous. We had to flush the catheter several times to keep it draining, but after a few days we were able to remove it. Charlie was then able to go home with medication and specialist food to dissolve the crystals and prevent more from forming. Charlie did very well at home and so a few months later he was weaned onto a less specialist food. Charlie was fine until March 2013 when unfortunately his urethra blocked once again. We had to repeat the procedure of catheterising him under an On his intravenous fluids with a anaesthetic, but this time his kidneys were struggling too. This can happen buster collar to stop him pulling at Tucking into his his catheter or drip. when back pressure from the blocked bladder prevents the kidneys from specialist diet doing their job of ridding the body of waste chemicals. We were very worried about Charlie for despite intravenous fluids and medication he was going into kidney failure, and as soon as we removed the catheter he re-blocked. However, after intensive nursing treatment and another anaesthetic to be re-catheterised he began to improve and his kidneys steadily recovered. He was in the hospital for a total of eight days before he was well enough to go home. We checked his bloods two weeks after his discharge and were delighted to find that his kidneys were still doing well. He will have to stay on a specialist diet for the rest of his life but hopefully will manage to have a healthy and happy urinary system! His owners were obviously delighted to have a healthy Charlie back home, and because they were on the Healthcare Plus scheme the treatment only A lovely card from Charlie’s family. cost them the price of first consultation (£23.40) saving them a huge £962.43! IS YOUR PET MICROCHIPPED? From 2016 it will be compulsory for all dogs to be microchipped....but why wait? We recommend that all cats and dogs are microchipped, now. Thousands of pets are lost every year and many are never reunited with their owners While collars and tags can get caught or removed microchipping identifies your pet permanently and effectively. So what does microchipping involve? A simple injection. And thereafter if your pet is ever brought into any vets, a police station, or a rescue centre they will be able to contact you to let you know that they have found your pet. PLAIN CHIPS ONLY £10 (With inbuilt BIOTHERM CHIPS ONLY £16 thermometer) WITH THIS VOUCHER May-August 2013 Ask any of our staff for more details and book your pet in now. AS H LE A V ET C E NT R E