Showing posts with label sedation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sedation. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2011

A Big Drink

Last night Buster would not go to sleep.  We went to bed and a short while later, he started barking to us.  I got up and checked that he was okay and gave him a sedative.  I held him and petted him and returned to bed. A few minutes later, he barked.  I had to lie down and hold him until he fell asleep.

Monday is a busy day in our house.  Buster spent part of the day alone, resting.  I came home and took him out briefly.  He trotted further today and I had to carry him home because he refused to come back.  Let the record show that I can carry a 70 pound dog half the length of a football field.  So, Buster is a fitness motivation for me...I have to keep up with my dog!

Today was the first day that Buster drank a lot.  We keep a bowl of water in his confinement area but he does not touch it, presumably due to the big Comfycone.  Sometimes he refuses a drink when we offer it.  Tonight I mixed a little liquid from garbanzo beans with a little chicken broth and a bit of pumpkin and diluted it all with water.  We think Buster drank a quart!  We added diluted broth to his breakfast and he still gets about a tablespoon of yogurt.  We'll need to devote a post to why Buster gets yogurt every day.

Today was the first day that Buster eliminated twice.  I mention this only because people who are nursing dogs after a surgery need to know that surgery can slow digestion down for a while.  It's been 10 days since Buster's surgery and related effects are still present.

Buster alternates between touching down, weight bearing, and carrying.  When he does bear weight, it is very light.  Nevertheless, he continues to improve.

Today's picture shows Bup just before bedtime, on his cushion, under a big grey towel, and in his Comfycone.  His big head is all that shows.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Quiet Sunday

Buster rested a lot today because we gave him a sedative.  He's really hating the restriction and having to stay home to rest.  So he stands up and talks and wags his tail.  He will not settle unless he has narcotics.

He also refuses plain water so we're continuing to mix a little pumpkin with a small amount of chicken broth (made by boiling a skinless breast without salt) into his water.  He drinks that better.  We add a little of the broth to his dry food and give him some yogurt each day and some fruit.

We roasted another pumpkin and started freezing it in cubes.  If you are local, decorated with small pumpkins for Halloween or Thanksgiving and you plan to throw them out, we will take them.  If they are in good shape, that is!  If you have a dog, put the pumpkins into the oven whole (without cutting them open or removing the stem), roast for about 45 minutes to an hour.  Let the pumpkin cool and slice it in half with a knife.  It should be easy to cut.  Scoop out the seeds and peel off the shell by hand.  You'll have an instant healthy treat for your dog.

Buster is bearing weight lightly.  We saw him doing it last night at dinner.  Today he has mainly rested but we've noticed a slight regression because he's carrying more and touching down less.  It is normal for a dog to show progress and then to plateau or even fall back a little.  We remain encouraged that he is doing so well.

Some of the neighborhood kids who adore Buster stopped by to ask if they could walk him.  I had to explain that he had surgery and cannot take any walks.  For the record, we'd never let inexperienced people walk Buster nor would we let neighborhood kids walk him unsupervised (we don't even let our own teens walk Buster).  American bulldogs are powerful, require strong, patient leaders, and knowledgeable handling when they get stubborn.

There is now a video of Buster singing.  The video is rather bad; Buster is hardly in frame because if he knows I am paying attention, he stops.  It is not his best song.  I just played it back, which made him worried and now he is whining at me.  I believe Buster prefers that we keep that video for our own private use only.  Sorry--the song of the bulldog remains a family tune.