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by Slamdunc on 28 January 2012 - 02:01
Great news! Give him a hug for me.
Jim

by yellowrose of Texas on 28 January 2012 - 03:01
You two have a guardian angel over you watching.
YR
by workingdogz on 29 January 2012 - 11:01
Keep up the great job with him!
Oh to be young and sleep on the floor etc again.
I'd need surgery if I did that now days


by Abby Normal on 29 January 2012 - 13:01
My GSD who had a hip op years ago was very needy to begin with, but sorted herself out within a few days. She still needed help, but it was more of a 'team effort' I too slept with her, for 10 days and on day 4 found her trying to get upstairs to bed on her own! A scary moment. Their powers of recovery and their adaptability are phenomenal. So do keep your eye on him, he may well start to try and do things he shouldn't before he should if you know what I mean.
Workingdogz: LOL - me too. But I'd still do it if I had to, but I would order in a special ORTHOPAEDIC mattress to sleep on LOL.
by Blitzen on 29 January 2012 - 14:01

by Spooks on 30 January 2012 - 08:01
My hubby slept on the floor for two nights too when our Border Collie had his double OCD op and I did when my GSD had an emergency pyometra op.

by LadyFrost on 30 January 2012 - 16:01
After a few days you will notice that he will start being stiff and sore on the hind leg he is able to use...I don't know what other did, but i can tell you what worked for me, at first i would lift and place her across my knees, but eventually we moved to the leather ottoman to slide under my dog (belly/chest cavity) it was perfect height, her front feet were still on the ground her back good foot just slightly touching the ground and I would rub her hip (not the one that had surgery) you will start noticing her leg will be tight and muscle will feel solid due to compensation for the other leg, so even 10-15 min rest with soft massage to loosen up the muscle and take weight of the hip will be a tremendous relief, also imagine sleeping on the same side night after night...
also, if you fold up a towel and place it between hind legs by slightly elevating operated hip and evening out hind leg with the hip..you pup will lay still longer...I also used ice packs for short period of time after she would be on her feet for longer period of time.

by ghostly on 03 March 2012 - 15:03
by ChrissyKim89 on 05 March 2012 - 04:03
So glad we're almost out of the woods with this leg. I'm thinking April is when I'll get the left side done, but I'll have to wait and see because now he has a bruised tooth which, if it becomes nonvital, will require a root canal or extraction... will it ever end?! Lol. Seriously though, I hope this doesn't progress into anything serious because I'm already stretched thin as it is. He's lucky I love his million dollar butt.
ETA:
LadyFrost, I did use your tips. It was very helpful, thank you for your advice. :)

by Abby Normal on 05 March 2012 - 19:03
Glad to hear he is doing so well. 1 mile is very good, and I imagine you have to be very careful not to overdo it still.
If there is no particular reason for a rush to get the second done, I personally would not go for it that soon. If possible it would be best if he were 100% good and muscled up and fully recovered on this leg before you consider getting the other hip done. This one is going to have to support him entirely when the other is done, and you want him feeling thoroughly comfortable and confident on it for when that happens. If he's not ready on the leg already done it could set him back on both if he doesn't feel comfortable using it while the second one heals.
I waited a year between surgeries, but would have thought 6 months would more likely allow for total rehab? Hope you don't mind me offering an opinion.
Sorry to hear about his tooth!
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