Thursday, September 26, 2013

Only Oscar




Oscar is gone now. 

He was always a challenging individual, lots of problems most not easy to resolve and new ones cropping up at unexpected times. But somehow our relationship endured. He was easy to be around with a placid accommodating temperament even when he was sick. We had our good times and bad, but he always seemed to be willing to try.

And so was I, right up to the end.

I ask myself now “Was Oscar a success or failure” and does that kind of judgment really apply?  He was a small black cat with a compromised immune system from the time we met several years ago.

He challenged my medical and analytical skills, my ingenuity, risk taking and ability to balance what could be done with what should be done. He made me think far outside the box.

When a new problem or reaction to treatment cropped up, his owner Judy and I would look at each other and say “Only Oscar” but always with a smile. He kept me up one night devouring most of a long untouched textbook of internal medicine, manically looking for “the answer” I might have missed. I found some crumbs but nothing more.

Then one day when, yet again, I hoped we might have found the “solution”,  his quality of life deteriorated.  His amazingly devoted owner called me to say he couldn’t jump up and was hiding from everyone. We had “saved him” before, but this time we both knew he had had enough.

What made Oscar  so unique was that he seemed to represent something larger than a medical challenge – the realization that there are no simple answers in life, but in striving to find the small openings along the way we discover our full potential. 

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Which is more dangerous ... Valentine's Day or Easter?

It's a delicious time of year for chocolate lovers; this dreamy early spring period between Valentines Day- chocolate hearts and kisses - and Easter with its chocolate bunnies and eggs. And much as I love chocolate, I wasn't really expecting it to enter my exam room one quiet Tuesday morning.

Sally Pearl had come to see me with her fittingly chocolate- colored Standard Poodle Sasha for an annual check up. We were chatting about  Sasha's diet and flea and tick preventives before we started the exam. I was working with a new assistant called Jane. She was cheerful and willing, though her animal handling experience went no further than petting her family's dogs.

I asked Jane to lift Sasha onto the table so we could start the examination and give the vaccines. As she leaned over to pick up the dog, out of the top pocket of her loose-fitting scrub top tumbled half a dozen chocolate kisses.  They landed right in front of the poodle's nose! With a sharp intake of breath, I leaned over and quickly swept them up, luckily before the dog could eat them.  I was only thankful that this wasn't a labrador who would surely have ingested any food item off the floor before we even realized what had happened. How would I have been able to explain to the owner that her pet had eaten a potentially toxic food in our hospital?

As my eyes widened and Jane started to go red in face, realizing what had happened, the owner carried on relating the details of her pet's feeding regime, none the wiser.  The rest of the exam went without a hitch. Afterwards, I told Jane :No chocolate, ever, in the exam room!

So, at this time of year when there is so much chocolate around, do be extra careful not to make it available in pockets, handbags or jeans to your canine friends. Dark chocolate is the most dangerous, but any chocolate especially in the pint-sized pets can be toxic.

If your dog ingests chocolate, call your vet and the ASPCA Poison Control Hotline (888 426 4435) which is open 24/7.

And have a Happy Easter!


See me at www.drevemartin.com