The professional staff at Kaukauna Veterinary Clinic uses this blog as a way to promote responsible pet ownership by sharing preventative health care and health-related educational articles.
Sunday, May 18, 2014
National Dog Bite Prevention Week May 18 - 24
This week is National Dog Bite Prevention Week, hosted by the American Veterinary Medical Association to help stop the nearly 5 million dog bites that happen every year in the United States. This week, we want to focus on canine behavior, and what dog owners can do to prevent their dogs from biting. In this podcast, Victoria Stilwell, dog trainer and host of Animal Planet’s “It’s Me or the Dog,” shares training tips to help prevent dog bites.
Victoria Stilwell Shares Tips to Stop Dogs From Biting
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
May is Pet Cancer Awareness Month
Cancer Awareness
By David Gagnon, DVM
David Gagnon, DVM |
We all know people get cancer, but did you know our pets do
too? Cancer, or neoplasia (from the
greek neo = new, and plasma = formation/growth) is uncontrolled cell growth and
can show up in a variety of ways, including in the skin, fat, bone, blood, and
many other places. Some cancers in
animals can be malignant, while others may be benign.
Since cancer can show up in different fashions, and a “mass”
can be seemingly anything, we have several ways to determine whether your
animal has cancer, and whether it is malignant or benign. We always prefer to look at its cells, and
the simplest way is as easy as doing a fine needle aspirate (collecting cells
with a needle). Biopsy with evaluation
by a pathologist is the best way to give us a true diagnosis.
Microscopic evaluation of fine needle aspirate |
Not all masses are apparent on your pet’s skin. Sometimes we can try to visualize them on
x-rays, ultrasound, CT or MRI. Occasionally advanced blood tests are the
preferred method of diagnosing cancer, as not all cancers are in the form of
tumors.
Abdominal mass |
In addition to the many techniques we use to diagnose
cancer, there are multiple ways to treat it.
Surgery, chemotherapy and radiation therapy are available, depending on
the cancer. Most of the tumors we see in
general practice are cured by surgery alone, whether it’s removing a lump from
the skin, amputating a limb, or removing the spleen. When most people think of
“chemo,” they think of nausea, hair loss, and poor quality of life. While this may be the case in people, this is
not typical of our animal patients. In
humans, our goal is usually to cure the disease. In pets, our goal is a good quality of life,
so we can try to put the disease into remission while keeping our pets in
otherwise good health. Radiation is
another way to treat cancer. The University of Wisconsin – Madison Veterinary Medical
Teaching Hospital recently became the first veterinary school to become
equipped with Tomotherapy. This uses CT scans to target the radiation,
so that only the cancer is treated, instead of surrounding tissues.
There are many unknowns when it comes to cancer, and there
is constant research to learn more. Morris
Animal Foundation is conducting a large study of Golden Retrievers over the course
of their lifetime to learn about risk factors, prevention, and cures for
cancer. This involves dedication from the
dogs’ owners and veterinarians to collect various samples every year so
researchers can identify genetic, environmental, and nutritional risk factors
for cancer and other major health problems in dogs. Check out the Morris Animal Foundation’s
Golden Golden Retriever Lifetime Study.
If you’re interested in participating in this study, please let us
know. The more animals that participate,
the more information will be available to help future cancer patients. Click the link below to learn more.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)