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<DIV>Someone from the Drool just sent me a note saying she was glad Abner's surgery went so well. It's been one heck of a week here, and I don't remember sending an update to the Drool. I've been so busy taking care of Abner, who still needs some babying, and a husband with a hurting back. So I'm sorry if some of this is a repeat, but here's a full update.</DIV>
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<DIV>Abner's surgery went really well. The surgeon did a great job, had enough skin to close everything well, and didn't have to push the bill up. We ended up paying the lower end of the estimate. Now if Abs will just heal well, things will be good.</DIV>
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<DIV>Abner is wearing the dreaded e-collar, which may be harder on me than on him, since I have to hold it up for him, so I walk bent over when I take him outside for his three ten-minute walks per day. He is also weaponized, so my shins may never be the same. I asked if they could cut a bit off the bottom, but the vet's office feared he'd be able to get at the incisions if they did that. This despite the fact that since his back surgery he has never curled up to clean himself in the back. We are staying safe rather than sorry, but by the time he sees the vet on the 19th, I may be completely crazy.</DIV>
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<DIV>Abner is staying in the kitchen for the time being. I refused to crate him, because it makes him aggressive. With this huge e-collar, he wouldn't have been able to move at all, so I think it was a wise choice. But Abs hates being in one room while everyone else is elsewhere. He can leave the kitchen if one of us humans holds onto him the whole time, so we let him join us in the living room last night, but when you put him back, it just makes him worse. He whines constantly until you go to bed and turn out the light. As long as he can hear the TV or our voices or see light, he will make our lives a misery. Eventually he does calm down, but he's still not a happy camper. And getting in and out of our far-from-huge kitchen is a challenge, since he lies right on top of the gate, and you can't get by that huge e-collar. "Back up? No way," says Abner.</DIV>
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<DIV>I think e-collars are cruel and unusual punishment. In the U.S. we have a law against that, except when it relates to healing hounds. I feel so guilty! But changing the collar is not a possibility, unless I drag him back to the vet's, which is a real chore, with his heavy ramp to deal with and no second human to help (Drew is pretty incapacitated right now). Unless it turns into a real issue, I think I will be leaving it on him, poor pup. I think he'd appreciate drool in that respect, though he's really doing fairly well, just some redness around his lower incision.</DIV>
<DIV>Pam, food slave to the Dashing Bassets and one hurting husband</DIV>
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