So I haven’t posted for a while. I
would love to say that we have been so busy living life to the full that
there’s been no time for the internet, but sadly that has not been the
case. We have predominantly been busy
nursing a poorly dog.
Although Jenny and I have settled
into our new life very quickly, the change has been a bit tougher on Ralph. Ralph
arrived in Muscat at 3 o’clock in the morning a few days after we arrived. Although he was very excited to see us, we
could tell that he just wasn’t his normal happy self. We gave it a couple of
days to see if he would settle in but quickly realised that he had to go to the
vets. It turns out that Ralph has an immune-deficiency disease. The lovely
Natalie at Muscat Vets advised that this is like an infection which can lie
dormant for long periods of time and is then brought on by stress. The long
flight over is likely to have triggered it, although had we made the very difficult
decision to leave him behind this is also likely to have triggered it. So a no
win situation. After numerous trips to the vets and several courses of steroids
Ralph finally seemed to be on the mend.
We got the all clear on the Monday
from the vet, but when I came home from work the day after I found Ralph’s
stomach all swollen and knew it was serious. I rushed him to the vet where they
x-rayed him and diagnosed him with having a twisted stomach. Firstly, they inserted
a tube into his right side to release the pressure. However, this didn’t work
and so they had to call the surgeon. We were warned that Ralph was in a very
serious condition and that his chances of survival were slim but they would
operate and see what they could do. So having sliced him open from chin to bum
and some 3 hours later we got a call to say that Ralph was out of surgery and
hanging on. Again, we were reminded that whilst he had survived the surgery, a
lot of things can change within 24 hours and his chances were 50:50 at best.
Ralph after surgery
Gastric torsion
A twisted stomach or gastric torsion
as it is also known can happen to any dog, but it predominantly happens to
large, deep chested dogs and is potentially fatal.
German Shepherds are one of the
breeds of dogs that are prone to gastric torsion and so we have always tried to
be as careful as we can to prevent this from happening. Ralph is always
exercised first and then we leave a time gap before he’s allowed to eat. He
also gets fed several small meals a day rather than a single large one in the
evening. Unfortunately for us, having just kissed goodbye to all our pet
insurance (it doesn’t exist in Oman), it’s just one of those things that can
happen at any time.
For whatever reason, the stomach
twists and gas becomes trapped. This causes a build up of pressure. At the same
time the blood supply is restricted to vital organs, which can cause organ
failure.
This is the x-ray (not Ralph’s –
stolen from Wikipedia) of the underside of a dog suffering from gastric
torsion. The dark area in the bottom right is the build up of gas.
Once this has happened to a dog,
there is a higher chance of it happening again. To prevent this the vets have
stapled Ralph’s stomach wall to the inside of his chest.
Fortunately for us Ralph has made an
amazing recovery and is going from strength to strength. Once he’s back to
normal then there’s just the heat to contend with!