Elgin tolerated his 4th chemo treatment very well, with no resulting leg-swelling. In my previous post, I bemoaned the infected callous (hygroma) Elgin had developed on his only rear leg. We had him on antibiotics and were doing laser treatments to the infected site. All seemed well.
We celebrated his 5th birthday, and while I am not a pet-party-thrower, I made him a special cake and made him wear a silly hat. I felt compelled to mark this birthday, as it had special significance; this summer we were in doubt if he would see this day.
I’ve been watching his hygroma. It was apparently healed, but has begun looking pink and shiny and feels hot again. The reason I doubted it was completely healed was that Elgin is pretty hard on this particular limb now, when he gets up from a laying position. He drags his weight forward until it is more centered over his front legs and then he pops that back leg up under him. As he does this, he drags his back hock along the ground with force, grinding that callous into the ground. There’s no way I can see that he could ever build up enough callous to withstand this. Because it’s in such an awkward area, it’s difficult to bandage. I looked online and saw options for hygromas on front legs, but the only thing I found for rear legs was instructions on how to put children’s sweatpants on him. I’m sure that’s effective, but I don’t want to have to put pants on him again… he wore shorts when he had a fresh incision, and it was a rather high-maintenance solution, they frequently fell off, came off, and looking silly.
So when I saw that his infection was back, and oozing, two nights ago, I used vetwrap and wrapped the area to try and protect it until we could get to the vet’s on Monday. As he dragged that leg to get up throughout the day, the vetwrap scraped off. I feared that if I wrapped it any tighter, it would become uncomfortable and hinder his movement or inhibit healing. So, in desperation and frustration, last night I set to work to invent something sturdy that would pad his hygroma and not inhibit movement or air circulation, AND stay put.
I took some soft leather and some velcro and some fake sheepskin material, and made a …thing. I’m not sure what to call it, but it seems to work, and it will be something I can forsee him having to wear for a long time. I take it off him when we go for walks, but it goes back on the rest of the time. It’s loose enough so it doesn’t squeeze his leg or hinder his movement, but the sturdy leather protects that hygroma from the grinding, scraping dragging that he does when he stands up. We will see what the vet thinks when I take him in tomorrow to have that hygroma looked at again.
I like the “thing” you made! That’s really clever. I’m glad it’s helping Elgin out! Sounds like he is doing very well!!
I love that photo! Elgin looks just like any kid waiting to blow out his candles. He is a natural in front of the camera!
Karen
Hoppy birthday Elgin! That picture is GREAT!
I love the thing you made too. I’m sorry the hygroma is still giving you problems but heck, you might be onto something with this design. Let us know what the vet thinks and keep us posted OK? We’re hoping that nasty thing stops giving Elgin and you headaches. Good luck!