Clarence at the ICU. Alert and responsive to the word “bone.” He’s doing AOK.
-July 24th 2012 (Day after surgery.)
This mess started a few months prior to the rupture in April, 2012 when I yanked Clarence by his harness off of a poodle puppy he was trying to maul.
Clarence is not and will never be a fan of being humped. He also hates puppies, and is inexplicably breed racist (breedist?) towards poodles. This dog interaction for him was the perfect storm.
Unfortunately, my attempt to save the poodle by yanking Clarence by his harness started a downward spiral of medical bills, human guilt, relationship stress, and most sadly, the loss of use in Clarence’s two back ham hocks.
Our first trip to the vet happened two days after the poodle incident.
Previous to this, our household had a “three day” rule when it came to dog illness. If Gumbo (my oldest dog) or Clarence didn’t “snap out of it” in three days we’d take them to the vet.
This time was different…Clarence was hiding under the couch panting and shying away from touch.This was not my guy, it was obvious he was in serious medical distress.
I was expecting the doctor to tell me he popped a leg out of joint, or maybe he had sprained his knee. I anticipated an x-ray or two, and thought I’d be sent home with some doggy anti-inflammatory. Instead the doctor said, “You need to go to the ER right now. I’m not a neurologist, this dog may have ruptured a disc and he need an MRI ASAP.”
FUUUUUCK. Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.
I immediately got in my car and drove the longest, saddest 4 miles of my life from Society Hill to University City, certain I had just killed my dog.
During the least expensive trip to the UPenn Vet ER EVER (I believe I came out under 100 dollars) Clarence was diagnosed with a degenerative disc disease. His spine was inflamed, but nothing had ruptured.
The doctor told me that this type of injury would have eventually happened without my “help” and with 6 to 8 weeks crate rest Clarence would fully recover.
HOWEVER (doom music) part of having a dog with a disc disease is managing their physical activity closely. Which means by doctor’s orders, that Clarence is absolutely in NO way EVER supposed to do the following completely typical DOG things:
jump on couches or down from couches
walk up steps, down steps
jump into cars, out of cars
play rough with other dogs
In a month and a half, my guy was back on his feet and out of the crate!
My husband and I, in the mean time, organized our lives around his new disability. I came home from work at noon every day to let him outside, we carried him him up and down the steps, blocked off the couch with pillows when we were not home, and we made sure to walk him and Gumbo separately to have more control over harry dog interactions that might cause him to exert himself too much physically.
We were golden! Stress over.
Add “window dogs” to the list of things that make Clarence react like a maniac.