 |
Resorts,
Hotels, Marinas,
Campgrounds, and Guides. Visit
hundreds of
destinations and make your vacation plans.
Great lodging for Fishing, Hunting, Camping, Canoeing, or just
relaxing. Make your vacation Now!
|
 |
|
Find
everything you need to enjoy the outdoors. From Guides, ATV's,
Boats and Accessories, Tackle, Truck Accessories, Snowmobiles,
Fishing and Hunting Products and much more!
|
 |
Monthly Fishing Reports
from local, bait shops, guides, and various Magazine affiliates,
as they appear in their monthly magazine's. |
 |
▪ National Fishing
Reports
▪
Fishing
Articles/News
▪
Ice Fishing News/Articles
▪
Hunting
News/Articles
▪
General
Outdoor News/Articles
|
 |
|
Your
guide to Ice Fishing - contests, ice fishing related
products, and articles. Visit our message board for current ice
fishing conditions from our viewers!
|
|
 |
Post
your fishing and hunting tips, techniques, or questions.
Free
Classified Ads:
Sell your used equipment or look for that hard to find item. |
Let Fish and Game™
Design Your Site! Contact us at: info@fishandgame.com |
|
-
|
|
September 20, 2005
Article
Dealing with
Hunting-Dog Injuries
By Martin Coffman, DVM
Cuts are
common in hunting dogs. Briars, barbed-wire, broken glass,
or even sharp broken saplings can slice a dog’s skin as it
hunts. Appropriate field care of wounds can decrease healing
time and make the veterinarian’s job much easier. Remember
the watchwords: flush, fill and wrap.
Flushing --
Fresh cuts
may look quite clean to the observer but most often, tiny
fragments of debris and certainly microscopic bacteria are
present in even the freshest lacerations. A forceful stream
of an appropriate liquid can dislodge the tiny foreign
objects in the wound and physically remove many of the early
germs that are present.
A plastic squeeze bottle or, better, a new spray bottle
should be in every hunter’s truck for flushing wounds. Your
veterinarian can recommend the correct fluid to use, but
distilled water or sterile saline solution will work. Be
fairly aggressive with the flushing. The stream is not going
to do any harm so set the spray bottle on the “stream”
function and spray large quantities into the wound bed. Blot
the area dry with a clean surgical sponge after the
flushing.
Filling -- After the initial cleaning with the flush,
wounds can be protected by filling them with a harmless gel.
K-Y Jelly®, EMT Gel®, or Collasate™ are ideal choices. These
gels provide a physical barrier to hair and other
contaminants en route to the veterinary clinic and the EMT®
and Collasate™ products may do more toward healing.
Your
veterinarian may recommend other topical medications.
Topical antibiotics, like those found in Neosporin®
ointment, are popular but I have always questioned the value
of antibiotics in a topical product. Regardless, they do no
harm.
The key is
the physical presence of the gel or ointment helping prevent
further contamination. In a pinch, petroleum jelly would
work but is difficult to remove as the veterinarian prepares
to suture or treat the wound later.
Bandaging --
Many wounds cannot be bandaged or do not need
bandaging. Cuts on the chest wall, back, muzzle, etc. are
not easily covered. Lacerations on the legs, tail and ears
are amendable to bandaging. The key is to avoid placing dry
cotton bandage material directly on the wound. Dry material
adheres to the tiny cells that begin healing within minutes
of the occurrence of the cut and pull them away from the
wound edges when the bandage is removed. In addition, the
tiny micro-clots that form quickly after a cut will also be
disrupted upon removal of the bandaging and could lead to
further bleeding.
Normal clotting
time for healthy dogs is between two and three minutes.
Those are laboratory values; dogs that have been running
hard may take up to five minutes for bleeding to stop. That
is a long time to sit and watch your dog drip blood in a
field.
Direct pressure
from your hand or a snug bandage is the best way to stop
bleeding. A small kit containing some bandages impregnated
with petroleum jelly (Adaptic® non-adherent bandages) and a
larger piece of absorbent cotton can work well to stop
bleeding.
Place the
Adaptic® sponge over the cotton and press it to the wound
for five to eight minutes. Then, gently remove to the
material to check the bleeding. Serious arterial bleeding is
a dangerous situation with an obvious spurting blood stream.
These wounds should be immediately covered with the
blood-stopping pressure bandage or hand-held in place while
the dog is transported to professional care.
For non-bleeding
wounds, a simple bandage should cover the laceration after
it has been filled with the protective gel. The objective is
simply to reduce further contamination. Snug is fine, but
very tight bandages can cause serious problems.
Several tapes
are available and good. Vetwrap® is popular and useful. It
sticks only to itself, which makes for easy removal at the
veterinary clinic. Good old standard adhesive tape in a
2-inch width is also useful. In a pinch, hardware duct tape
will suffice for first aid use but it leaves a substantial
residue of glue after a usually difficult removal process.
Again, the risk
of getting any bandage too tight should be considered. As
you place the tape over the wound all pulling should be done
against your other hand. Do not pull the tape directly
around the wounded area. Place two fingers against the tape
near the roll and put the pressure on the fingers not the
dog. Then, place the tape gently over the wound.
Cuts on the tip
of the ear flap (called the “pinna”) are especially
troublesome. As the normal clotting process proceeds, the
dog tends to shake its head which breaks loose the tiny
clots that have formed and the process starts all over
again.
Bandaging the
ear is ideal but can be difficult as the dog tends to sling
off bandages quickly. Taping the cut ear tip to the top of
the head will work and help the clotting process.
But, be
extremely careful if you elect to wrap the tape all the way
around the dog’s head and neck. The risk of closing off the
dog’s windpipe is substantial. You should be able to get two
fingers easily under the bandage on the bottom of the neck
if this type of wrapping is required.
Do not waste
valuable time in the field redoing bandaging again and again
for ear tip cuts or other cuts. Rapid transport to the
veterinary clinic is the ideal.
As always, a
conversation with your veterinarian is the optimal source
for information concerning field care of cuts.
For more hunting-dog health care and training information,
visit
www.sportdogbrand.com
where I’ve posted additional articles.
Dr. Coffman is the past President of the American Canine
Sports Medicine Association, a group of veterinarians and
other professionals with a special interest in athletic
dogs. After 30 years in private practice, he is now the
Sporting Dog Veterinarian for the Iams Company and Eukanuba.
He owns a bunch of Beagles and Aggie, a German Drahthaar,
his personal hunting dog.
|
|
For information on advertising with Fish and
Game™,
contact:
info@fishandgame.com
|