Skip to content

Baby got spayed

Basenji Health Issues & Questions
  • little suki got spayed today. she was ready to play within minutes after we got home. i took her out to potty on leash, and made her sit with me on the couch. right away she settled and took a nap. when she woke up, she wanted to eat and play. she was so fast jumping off the couch, i didn't catch her in time. i let her sit and walk around and eat, and then she took off and jumped up onto the couch! she is SOOO fast! so, i put her on leash for awhile so i could control her playfulness. she ate a little more, and is now napping again. poor baby. i don't know how i'm going to keep her calm and rested for 10 days!!!! and the e-collar! for 10 days! poor baby. poor me - she's gonna make me crazy!

    but i'm soooo grateful that she is healthy and doing well. she has some pain reliever for the next three days, and from advice on here, i had her put under with the mask (isoflurane) rather than the injection. the vet had no problem with that and didn't think i was a weirdo for asking.

    now i'm wondering how cozy it's going to be with the e-collar in bed with me…. :rolleyes:

  • Simon was so pathetic with the e-collar – but it was a must for him, since he's a nitwit and took out one catheter while he was still at the vet and was determined to remove the stitches the whole time. We were weenies and picked up an inflatable collar at petco, which worked fine and he seemed to like having a built in pillow.

    It was tough keeping him from dashing at first, and in fact we called to ask what we could give him that wouldn't interfere with pain meds. (They recommended benadryl, and it did help a lot.) We also used teh crate a LOT and just had to keep our pity to ourselves.

    Also, the pain meds gave him the runs, and we had to do a lot of juggling of dosage.

    He's doing great now. We all survived!

    Glad she's doing well :)

  • ha! thanks for the ideas - and glad i'm not alone.

    oh, yeah. suki needs the e-collar big time. if there is a loose string hanging from anywhere or anyone, she is SURE to find it and pull on it continuously until it is hers! now, imagine the loose string hanging from her own body! oh, she would have a good ol' time with those stitches!

  • i went to the restroom - she jumped off the sofa again. there is no way to keep her completely jump-free. what can i do besides keeping her in her crate all the time? how bad is the occasional (well, ok, more than occasional - it's been at least 5 times since 3:00 pm!) jump? is she really going to hurt herself, mess up her internal organs?? i'm pretty worried, because as much as i try, if i move from this couch, she follows me.

  • most likely she will be fine with a little jumping here and there. It is near impossible to keep a healthy dog from moving around after surgery. If she jumps down, and it hurts she will be more careful the next time. Keep her from jumping on and off a high bed, or table; and don't let her rough house with other dogs, and she should do fine. She isn't likely to hurt her internal organs..organ wise, everything that they cut into has been removed. But she chould rupture her sutures…however, normal activity is pretty unlikely to cause that. Dogs are pretty tough, and especially basenjis!

  • @Quercus:

    most likely she will be fine with a little jumping here and there. It is near impossible to keep a healthy dog from moving around after surgery. If she jumps down, and it hurts she will be more careful the next time. Keep her from jumping on and off a high bed, or table; and don't let her rough house with other dogs, and she should do fine. She isn't likely to hurt her internal organs..organ wise, everything that they cut into has been removed. But she chould rupture her sutures…however, normal activity is pretty unlikely to cause that. Dogs are pretty tough, and especially basenjis!

    Yes, this.

    I forgot to add my disclaimer to my post: I'm neurotic this year. When Simon went for neutering, I had lost two young dogs within a calendar year, and I was convinced he would die on the table. The vets were very kind and gave me very good advice on how to be as conservatively careful as I needed to be :)

    I'm much less neurotic than I was even a month ago. Really! And Simon has about as much vim as I can take :D

  • I have not had to use a e-collar on Wheat. She only licks when she has gone outside and its wet. Re jumping. The pain pills my vet gave really did kind of knock her into a sleepy state…so maybe its the difference in meds?
    We are at day 4 and the meds are gone..she seems just like her old self, and the surgery site looks great...so, good luck.

  • @listeme:

    Yes, this.

    I forgot to add my disclaimer to my post: I'm neurotic this year. When Simon went for neutering, I had lost two young dogs within a calendar year, and I was convinced he would die on the table. The vets were very kind and gave me very good advice on how to be as conservatively careful as I needed to be :)

    I'm much less neurotic than I was even a month ago. Really! And Simon has about as much vim as I can take :D

    I can understand that. When you lose a dog suddenly (or otherwise) it is really hard to not over-react over everything. After our Luna died, I panicked every time one of the dogs looked a little 'off'. I can't imagine losing two in one year :(

  • well, i'm neurotic, too, and was sure that by jumping onto the sofa her stitches would come loose and internal organs would be spilling out onto the floor. so, glad that's not the case. i have her on leash now, and just make her get up and go wherever i go. she ate well this morning, and just took a pain pill (remadyl - NSAID). now she sleeping on my lap. i've got some things to do, so i'll put her in her crate awhile today. she's still wearing the e-collar because i just don't trust that she won't pull at the stitches - she can find a loose string on someones sweater from across the room and rushes after it.

    thanks for the reassurances.

    oh - and my new neuroses from reading too much on the internet last night, is that i spayed her too young and she's not going to grow any more and be in this perpetual leggy, 13-pound puppy state. ai ai ai!

  • tlish, you did the right thing, spaying, for your family and your dog..don't let anyone tell you difference.

  • thanks. i definitely wanted to get her spayed before she came into her first season. i'm just wondering if she really would've come into season right at six months, or if i could have waited 'til she was nine months… oh, well, it's done now and all went well. i'm so grateful for that.

  • Depending on the type of e-collar, you can make life better by cutting nickle size holes in it to give peripheral vision.

    As for jumping, when you get up why not just set her butt on the floor so she doesn't have to jump? You KNOW she's going to follow so just go ahead and put her down. :)

  • yep, that's what i'm doing now. i had hoped that she wouldn't wake up from peaceful sleep just to follow me to the bathroom. well… i was wrong. so now i just set her down and bring her with me on leash. that way when she gets bored with whatever i'm doing, she doesn't go and jump back up onto the couch. it's going to be a loooooong week.

  • Maybe try Suki without her e-collar, watching closely. Shaye did not need one, I found, because although she licked the wound once in a while, it was not excessive, she did not worry at it - and the pain relievers seemed to keep her moving around without noticing it much. Of course, they are all different.

  • well, we made an adjustment. i bought one of the inflatable collars today. i'm not totally impressed because i'm sure if she were determined, she could still get at those stitches. fortunately, she doesn't seem like she wants to work that hard. so, i will let her wear that while i am with her so she can chew on toys comfortably, smell properly at restroom times, not run into walls, etc. when she's in her crate, i'm going to put the e-collar back on since i can't supervise. better safe than sorry. i'm still contemplating about bedtime…. she sleeps with me, so she's quasi-supervised, but i'm sleeping, so not entirely. we'll see....

Suggested Topics

  • Spaying

    Basenji Health Issues & Questions
    24
    0 Votes
    24 Posts
    12k Views
    M
    Maca is not well welcome at the vet, she was there for one day, and the vet was so happy that i was pick up her the same day hahaha she destroyed a cage… they were there because Maca bites Laika and Laika had to stay there several days until i get fixed the garden door, But she was sad and quiet. I dont want to repeat that.. poor girls...
  • Spaying info

    Basenji Health Issues & Questions
    7
    0 Votes
    7 Posts
    3k Views
    D
    If you can wait, I would have her spayed in early Summer. I had one rescue whose birthdate was in early January and she came into season in early September. It was a surprise as I just got her and her sire and he was intact also. Luckily I was able to get her spayed ASAP. I have a rescue who is 8 years old and is longer than she is tall. She waddles when she walks, swings her hips. Since I never had a B walk like this I did have her hips x-rayed and thankfully Dr. Tracy rated them as fair. Jennifer
  • Poor Baby..

    Basenji Health Issues & Questions
    66
    0 Votes
    66 Posts
    18k Views
    thunderbird8588T
    Glad to hear Kairoe seems to be on the mend :)
  • Spaying

    Basenji Health Issues & Questions
    13
    0 Votes
    13 Posts
    5k Views
    R
    One of my brother's friend Wilson also faced the same situation in which you mentioned that A friend at work lost her dog last year during the procedure so I'm somewhat nervous. But I faced this I got result normal. I was doing my work. I was upset at the time because I had my work burden headache. But decided to go near the Vet for my animal treatment I appreciate the work of the Vet.
  • Baby Teeth

    Basenji Health Issues & Questions
    7
    -1 Votes
    7 Posts
    4k Views
    tanzaT
    @Solomon: I will wait, for a few more weeks, I am going to take him in to have id chip installed and will discuss with my vet. I gues I am just looking forward to have that part of puppy-hood behind us. He is a very normal basenji!!! Thanks for all of the advice! Glenn Certainly you are no different to us.. we are ALL happy when those puppy "needle" teeth finally disappear!:)
  • Spaying

    Basenji Health Issues & Questions
    60
    0 Votes
    60 Posts
    20k Views
    QuercusQ
    @tanza: Well, I have to say that the fact that she way spayed early IMO has nothing to so with her being higher in the rear then the front.. Many Basenjis grow that way… and besides, she is a mix.. so I don't think you can really determine that... While she might have grown differently... again IMO I don't think that was the cause... or if it is maybe a little... However, I totally agree that her leaking urine is most likely due to the early spay... also (and I am NOT saying that this was true in her case or the Vets they used) but I have seen way to many bad spay/neuter jobs from the so called "low" cost clinics.... they treat them like an assembly line and in my opinion I have seen way to many problems coming from these places... For me, thanks, I will spend the money to make sure it is done right... Obviously things happen, but I 3 spayed bitches in the house ages 13, almost 15 and 16+, never have they have a problem with "leaking" due to them being spayed.... Granted they were done at 3 and 5yrs old... but again, from these so called low cost clinics, I have seen many a dog with problems. I agree with Pat here. I think the high in the rear is most likely attributed to her being half something else ;) But the dribbling…yes, probably due to a less than perfect spay...or early spay...BUT there are medications that you can give her to help with that.