
excerpt
…in dogs: some of these stones, usually smooth and round most times
dissolve over time, and some other kind of stones were jagged and usually
they remained in the body for a long time, and this was the kind
Elvis had in his bladder.
“What do you suggest we do?” He asked the vet.
“Surgery,” the vet answered.
Cold sweat overtook both as they recalled that Elvis was hit by
a car when he was only a year and a half, and that resulted in surgery
to join two parts of the right side of his pelvis that were broken. The
surgeon used two platinum plates and nine screws to mend the pet’s
broken bone, and it took the young animal two months to heal and feel
good. The idea of another surgery didn’t sit well with them.
“Is there any chance the stone might dissolve?” he asked as if
begging for a positive result.
“I wouldn’t say this,” the vet insisted.
“There is a procedure of using a laser to pulverize kidney stones
for people; is this done to animals?” He asked the vet.
“Not here; I believe there is a company down south and one in
Winnipeg that performs such procedures, but the logistics of doing it
there are against you, you know, travelling, US funds, etc.”
“I see”
“What we could do,” the vet underlined, “is to put him on a sodium
diet which will force him to drink more often and with the excess consumption
of water the stone might be neutralized for a while.”
“Perhaps this is a better option,” they both agreed.
And they put the dog on that special diet. They bought the
proper food and drove home. However, when they talked about it later
and searched the internet for ideas, they decided to get a second opinion.
They located another local vet and called him. The next day, the
new vet examined Elvis and recommended a scan. They agreed. When
the scan results were known, he called them for a consultation. Something
made both feel uneasy. True enough, after his initial comments,
the vet referred to some calcification, revealed by the scan, and lined
the wall of the dog’s penis that led to his urethra.








