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submitted 7 months ago by transientDCer to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Hello all - first and foremost thank you to anyone who is able to take time to respond. I'm looking for some guidance and trying to understand if tis is a common death in dogs or was there any way to potentially avoid it.

I recently posted on r/petloss with more of the story of how I got this dog, but long story short I got him about a year ago from a shelter and he was already fixed and UTD on shots. We took him into our regular vet on March 9th for a checkup and the only thing she noted was that he was a little bit skinny (made sense at the time - he wasnt eating in the shelter). We took him for an appoint on October 10th and got a clean bill of health. On November 4th, Balto started showing some signs of distress after eating his breakfast. He had laid back down in his crate but then started crying and dragging his back legs. We rushed him to an emergency vet where he was ultimately diagnosed with a diaphragm hernia - the scheduled surgery for November 6th.

I spoke with the surgeon when I dropped him off who coincidentally also had a diaphragm hernia at birth, and also did her residency under the Dr who performed a hip replacement on our other dog. I felt really good about it and we spoke mostly about what the recovery would look like. Less than 4 hours later Balto was dead. The surgeon called when he was out of surgery and said that his liver was twisted / firm and dark purple. His entire intestines' was in his chest cavity along with his spleen. They removed the spleen when moving everything back to the abdomen because it didn't fit. She said he was starting to come out of anesthesia but his legs were cold and tongue was blue-ish and he didn't have the correct pulse.

She called again ~10 minutes later and said he was in cardiac arrest and they were performing CPR but he was not going to make it.

After this, the vet mentioned his true cause of death was reperfusion injury. She sent me the following text to help explain it:

"Reperfusion injury refers to a cascade of events occurring at the cellular level in response to the sudden reintroduction of highly oxygenated blood into an anaerobic (no oxygen) environment. As the oxygen returns, there is generation of a large number of free oxygen radicals and other highly reactive compounds. These compounds have a short half-life and are unstable. They are generated and interact immediately with cells. This interaction can severely damage cellular integrity and generate more free radical molecules.
This situation is important in chronic diaphragmatic hernia management because reexpansion of chronically atelectic lungs and restoring blood flow to chronically compromised portions of liver or gastrointestinal tract results in generation of free radicals. Conditions such as reexpansion pulmonary edema and liver shock, reported as complications of chronic diaphragmatic hernia repair, may be fatal."

I found the textbook that she quoted, and the wording is slightly different. The textbook says the following - bolding and emphasis mine.

  1. Discuss reperfusion injuries. Reperfusion injury refers to a cascade of events occurring at the cellular level in response to the sudden reintroduction of highly oxygenated blood into an anaerobic environment. As the oxygen returns, there is generation of a large number of free oxygen radicals and other highly reactive compounds. These compounds have a short half-life and are unstable. They are generated and interact immediately with cells. This interaction can severely damage cellular integrity and generate more free radical molecules. Only by reacting with a free radical scavenger is the cycle interrupted.

This situation is important in chronic diaphragmatic hernia management because reexpansion of chronically atelectic lungs and restoring blood flow to chronically compromised portions of liver or gastrointestinal tract results in generation of free radicals. Conditions such as reexpansion pulmonary edema and liver shock, reported as complications of chronic diaphragmatic hernia repair, may be blunted by careful consideration of the potential for reperfusion injury. No single method is effective in preventing or managing reperfusion events in patients. Medications, such as steroids or free radical scavengers, and management practices, such as lobectomy for severely compromised liver lobes and slow gradual reinflation of compromised lung tissue over several days, may decrease the severity of reperfusion injury.

I guess my question is - was there something missed? What question do I need to ask the surgeon to help understand that they did everything they could to prevent this from happening? Is reperfusion injury a common death reason for correcting a diaphragm hernia in dogs?

Thanks for any help / advice that anyone can offer.

[-] transientDCer 56 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Not sure where else to post this. This is my boy Balto (the full husky), who unfortunately passed away during an emergency surgery on Monday to correct a diaphragm hernia. I'm going to miss him forever.

[-] transientDCer 16 points 8 months ago

Asking for a cease fire to move people out. Nothing about them being able to return to their homes or land.

[-] transientDCer 13 points 8 months ago

10x harder than zomboid? Fuck that.

[-] transientDCer 21 points 8 months ago

Don't be so selfish. Have you thought about the shareholders???

[-] transientDCer 24 points 8 months ago

I think reddit/lemmy are good if you enjoy following communities. Twitter/mastodon are good if you prefer following specific people.

[-] transientDCer 41 points 8 months ago

This is literally just a joke about how people become obsessed with dirt bikes or track days - whichever type of motorcycle he has in there.

[-] transientDCer 29 points 9 months ago

I think the joke is about caterers doing this. Book a photographer session vs a wedding photographer and the prices are going to be drastically different.

[-] transientDCer 25 points 9 months ago

Look at this privileged asshole who thinks his son should have his own room.

[-] transientDCer 15 points 10 months ago

There is a recent development that they and their billions might not actually be shielded:

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court-purdue-pharma-settlement-bankruptcy-sackler-family-oxycontin/

[-] transientDCer 14 points 10 months ago

I work for a company that champions their diversity and inclusion stuff EVERYWHERE. I'm partially deaf and wear hearing aids. At a company hosted Christmas Party they had this Cards Against Humanity style game - it wasnt CAH, all of the cards were pretty innocent - like speak in an accent, treat the card as a baby, etc. New guy got a card that said "Imitate someone at the table". He turned to the guy next to him and said "I can't hear you, can you repeat that" - mocking me for being deaf. One of people at the table caught on really quick and was like WTF did you just say?

Nobody laughed. The other person reported the incident to HR and I had to recap the whole thing to them. The guy never apologized for it. HRs resolution was that I could "leave the team" or the company if I didn't want to work with him anymore. This person was one of five people on my team. I didn't leave the team mostly because my manager was pretty supportive and didn't agree with the HR outcome.

So yeah. Coworkers aren't your friends and neither is HR. We got 84% on our D&I score for employee engagement ratings this year.

[-] transientDCer 15 points 10 months ago

I used to take my dog into Lowe's just to help socialize him, but during the pandemic absolutely everyone did that and it was a nightmare of lunging animals.

[-] transientDCer 17 points 10 months ago

Pretty sure this is one of those fancy dry cleaning/steam cabinet things.

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transientDCer

joined 10 months ago