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Home
> Out of the Cage! > March/April
2006 > Picasso Veterinary Fund in Action: Sweet Spaniel Gets
Another Second Chance
Picasso Veterinary Fund in Action
Sweet Spaniel Gets Another Second Chance
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Cavalier King Charles Spaniel,
Vanilla, was injured while walking off-lead, turned
in to an AC&C shelter, and now is awaiting
adoption. Click
here to help other animals like Vanilla.
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When Vanilla walked out of a NYC Animal Care &
Control shelter with her new family last year, she had no idea that
within a year she would be returned to the shelter as "damaged
goods." Sadly, in the relatively short time this sweet seven-year-old
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel mix spent with her adoptive family,
she was hit by a car while off-lead, resulting in a severely injured
leg. So her family returned her to the shelter.
As soon as she arrived back at the shelter, AC&C
staff contacted the Mayor's Alliance, which arranged for the Picasso
Veterinary Fund to pay for this sweet lady's medical care. Vanilla's
leg was lame, having no sensation or weight-bearing ability whatsoever.
An orthopedic surgeon at the Veterinary Emergency & Referral
Group in Brooklyn — one of the excellent veterinary facilities
that treats many of our Picasso Veterinary Fund animals —
diagnosed Vanilla as having nerve damage resulting in no sensation
in her paw.
Vanilla's doctors identified three treatment options.
They could simply leave the leg alone and do nothing. They could
repair the leg so that it would remain in a permanent walking position
— advantageous for mobility, but with a downside of possibly
focusing Vanilla's attention on the paw and trigger chewing (self-mutilation)
of the leg. A third option: amputate the leg.
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Vanilla got a second chance
thanks to the Picasso Veterinary Fund. Click
here to help other animals like Vanilla. |
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Despite the absence of feeling, the injured leg
continues to provide Vanilla with the ability to balance, and so
her doctors recommended that surgery be delayed to see how well
she adapts to her lame leg. So far she's doing just great! And she's
anxiously awaiting adoption at Animal
Haven's adoption center at Biscuits & Bath, 41 West 13th
Street, in Manhattan. If you're interested in meeting Vanilla, stop
by or call (212) 901-7914.
If she could speak, Vanilla likely would warn anyone
who shares a dog's life how quickly that life can be changed —
or wiped out — when left off-lead. We'll never know the exact
circumstances that lead to Vanilla's accident, but far too often we
see the injuries and loss of life that can result from dogs being
left off-lead (like Lance, another Picasso Veterinary Fund recipient,
whose leg had to be amputated as a result of injuries from a run-in
with a car). Or the dangers of slipping a lead while tethered outside
a store awaiting a guardian's return (like a young Schnauzer who
was killed when he slipped his lead several weeks ago in Chelsea
and ran headlong into rush-hour traffic).
Thankfully, Vanilla got a second chance, despite
her injury. She, and all the other wonderful dogs and cats who have
received critical medical treatment paid for by the Picasso Veterinary
Fund, are the lucky ones.
To help more AC&C animals get the special medical
care they need so that they can be adopted into loving homes, please
support to the Picasso Veterinary Fund. Click
here to make a convenient online donation.
| About the Picasso Veterinary
Fund
The
Picasso
Veterinary Fund, administered by the Mayor's Alliance
for NYC's Animals, provides financial assistance to help pay
for extraordinary life-saving medical treatment for AC&C
animals transferred to other Alliance Participating Organizations
for adoption. Since 2003, hundreds of dogs and cats have received
medical treatment paid for by this fund. Click
here to read about some of the lucky Picasso recipients,
adopt a Picasso pet, subscribe to the Picasso Veterinary
Fund in Action! newsletter, or make a convenient online
donation to the fund.
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