Rescued Dachshund saved,
ready for new home

Sunshine, the rescued Dachshund.

Sunshine, the rescued Dachshund, is now in need of a forever home.

By Dr. Brian DiGangi

Sunshine’s future wasn’t so bright when she found herself at the Alachua County Animal Services shelter with an irritating and unattractive skin condition in early October. Fortunately for her, however, Andrea Brower, executive director of Helping Hands Pet Rescue of Newberry, saw beyond the 4-year old Dachshund’s homely exterior and knew a special creature lay beneath.

“I had this feeling that she needed me,” Brower said.

With the guidance of dermatologists at the UF Small Animal Hospital and funding from the Shelter Animal Medicine clerkship’s HAARTS program, Sunshine’s story should have ended there, but it turned out she needed more help than anyone realized.

With her skin condition under treatment, Sunshine came to the Shelter Animal Medicine clerkship for spay surgery. Under the direction of the program’s service chief, Dr. Natalie Isaza, the surgical procedure was going smoothly. As the final sutures were being placed, however, things took a scary turn.

“Sunshine started losing hemoglobin saturation and turned a little blue,” Dr. Isaza said. “We kept her on oxygen and she got her pink color back, but when we extubated her, she went into cardiac arrest.”

The clerkship team jumped into action, successfully performing CPR and re-starting Sunshine’s heart, but the scenario repeated itself each time Sunshine began to wake up from anesthesia. With the help of the Emergency and Critical Care service and x-rays of Sunshine’s chest, the mystery of Sunshine’s anesthetic difficulties was finally discovered: She had an old traumatic injury resulting in a diaphragmatic hernia.

“Diaphragmatic hernias can be life-threatening and we were very fortunate that this was discovered while she was in a facility where it could be repaired promptly,” said Dr. Valery Scharf, one of surgeons at the UF Small Animal Hospital who repaired Sunshine’s hernia.

Brower was also grateful for the efforts of Sunshine’s team of doctors, saying “I feel confident that Sunshine would not have survived at any other hospital.”

Brower’s initial reaction was right; Sunshine did need her, along with a team of veterinary specialists at the UF Small Animal Hospital who worked together to save her life. Now fully recovered from her ordeal, Sunshine is hoping to find her new home in time for the holidays.

Since its inception, the HAARTS program has saved the lives of more than 500 animals at risk for euthanasia in local shelters and currently relies solely on private donations to fulfill its lifesaving mission.

Click here for “before” and “after” photos of Sunshine.

 

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December 2012

Dr. Candie Corriher, a student in the UF Maddie's Shelter Medicine Online Graduate Certificate program, at the Cat Adoption Team clinic, a cats-only shelter in Sherwood, Ore., where she serves at interim lead veterinarian. Corriher, who is deaf, is shown with an electronic stethoscope that patches into her cochlear implant.

Veterinarian with hearing loss participating in online shelter medicine course

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