- Joined
- Apr 12, 2007
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Vets are people too and make a lot of mistakes. I think we should share them so we can learn from their mistakes and not repeat them!
Here a few from my experience...
-Vets tend to get lazy with physical exams: Missed broken wing on a bird, missed an obvious lymphadenopathy (enlarged lymph nodes) which changed everything with that case (presented for paresis- vet was thinking neuro- turned out to be neoplasia)
-Boarding a seizure dog overnight with no one there and when techs arrived that next morning the poor dog was seizuring (who knows how long) and had a temp of 108.
-Dog down in both legs, referred for neuro when it turned out to be bilateral CCL tears (a little bit more tricky, but a mistake non the less)
And here is why I am uncomfortable keeping animals overnight on IV fluids with no one in the hospital- dog got tangled up and choked himself (lived through it but was unconscious when techs arrived), cat ripped out catheter and bled A LOT, arm tangled up in fluids and swollen due to constriction.
Here a few from my experience...
-Vets tend to get lazy with physical exams: Missed broken wing on a bird, missed an obvious lymphadenopathy (enlarged lymph nodes) which changed everything with that case (presented for paresis- vet was thinking neuro- turned out to be neoplasia)
-Boarding a seizure dog overnight with no one there and when techs arrived that next morning the poor dog was seizuring (who knows how long) and had a temp of 108.
-Dog down in both legs, referred for neuro when it turned out to be bilateral CCL tears (a little bit more tricky, but a mistake non the less)
And here is why I am uncomfortable keeping animals overnight on IV fluids with no one in the hospital- dog got tangled up and choked himself (lived through it but was unconscious when techs arrived), cat ripped out catheter and bled A LOT, arm tangled up in fluids and swollen due to constriction.