The surgery opens from 8 - 7 every week day, however I stayed from 9 until 3 every day.
13th July - 17th July 2015
- On the first day I saw a kitten get spayed and a kitten get neutered. This was at 10am on the first day so already this surgery was a lot busier than the previous veterinary surgery I went to. At ark vets, I saw a bitch get spayed, so I was familiar with the procedure - it was quick, however not as quick as the castrate. An incision was made in the lower abdominal region where the vet would search inside the body to find two ovaries attached with two horns to a cervix. The castrate was simple, an incision was made on the balls where the testicles were bulged out. The tesicles are attached by two horns of some sort and tied. These small incisions were left to heal by themselves as no suturing was required. However, on dogs, instead of directly cutting the ball to release the testicles, an incision is made just below the balls and suturing is involved when on dogs. Another case came in, a labrador who had an ear that was filled with blood. This had happened before and was drained but had happened again. The blood vessels in the ear burst and the ear swelled with blood. The vet drained the ear by making a small hole on the inside of the ear. After draining, the vet sutured a sponge pad to the inside of the ear to remove some of the tension that the sutures would have on the ear.
- The second day was a lot more stressful and emotional. I had never witnessed a euthanasia in practice until that day. A dog came in with breathing difficulties and unfortunately died in the practice (I did not get to see this.) A kitten also came in, which seemed like a stray kitten that primary school children brought in. It looked to have been run over, it was shaking uncontrollably and there was an extreme chance the kitten had internal bleeding. So, the vet made the decision to put the kitten to sleep as this was the best thing for te welfare of the animal as it seemed to be in a lot of pain. This was my first euthanasia I had witnessed in real life and I must say that I started to handle it better than I thought I would have. I didn't start to cry, I was just so sorry for the animal that I just wanted it to stop suffering. However, when the vet poked the needle into the vein on the arm of the kitten, the kitten squealed and I had no other choice but to go to the toilet and have a little cry. Also that day, a dog de bordeaux came in who had a small lump just beneath its pepuse. The vet removed the lump and sutured it up nice and very neat. I asked about the suturing material, he used a material that would dissolve into the skin without 3 weeks and also used non-dissolvable sutures on the outside which would need taking out in 10 days.
- On this day, a golden retreiver went into surgery for 3 and a half hours in order to remove two fatty lumps from its side and also a very large cyst from its neck. The two fatty lumps were removed and sutured as normal. The very large cyst was removed which actually left a tiny bit of excess skin. The sutured area seemed a bit baggy to me but I think that was because such a large cyst was removed - the vet was pleased with it so we were all pleased with it. Closer to the end of the surgery, I was put in charge of listening to the heart rate of the dog and counting the amount of beats within 15 seconds and timesing by 4 to calculate bpm. I also watched the chest and counted how many breaths were done within 30 seconds to times that by 2. A dog was also castrated and an ultrasound scan was taken of a cat abdominal area to search for signs of any lumps or tumours or anything abnormal in the area. They found nothing using the ultraosund scan but there was a larger kidney than expected but the vet didn't seem too concerned about it as it was a large cat. There was also sediment that was found in the bladder so a urine test would be done to further examine if there's anything wrong.
- On the thursday, a kitten came in for a spey. However it was pregnant. I wasn't very educated about the reproductive system in animals and actually thought the embryos were not attached to the ovary horns but they were. There were 6 kittens who were removed from the kitten. The kittens were just under half way of their development. The vet kindly let me put on some gloves and let me examine and experiment on the unborn kittens. There were two sacs. I had to cut the first sac in order to get to the second sac which was yellowy in colour and quite transparent. If you opened this sac, the kitten was inside and it was so interesting to see how much it had developed. I did feel quite bad as I wish these kittens could've been born into the world but it was the owner's choice to do so.
- Finally, friday came and not much really happened on this day. There was a few castrates and speys. A tortoiseshell kitten came in to be speyed and it was one of the cutest kittens ever, it just wanted to play all the time and I found myself always coming back to the kitten when nothing was happening in the practice to play with her. The dog de bordeaux from earlier that week came in because the sutures had fallen out, resulting in a very large wound. However, the dog had only just eaten not that long before it came in so anaesthesia was not an option. I asked why and this is because the animal could actually throw their food back up involuntarily under the anaesthetic and would mot likely result in the animal choking from its own vomit. So, 7 of us held down the dog whilst the vet stapled the wound back together. The vet couldn't just leave the wound and would have to temporarily get the wound sutured back up using a surgical stapler. This may have been quite painful for the dog but was essential to remove the risk of infection and other nasties getting into the wound.