
Hi Alex
I am happy to share our story with you, I know how worrying it is to go for such a big operation.
My lovely GSD girl was diagnosed at about 18 months old with Hip Dysplasia, and it was severe. She was on Rimadyl, and we did shorter bursts of exercise, rather than one great long walk a day. She did quite well on this regime for some time. Then when she was just over 4, we noticed her getting very stiff after exercise, and when she walked after having laid down for a while, would cry when she got up, and then take little pigeon steps (quite painful to watch) until she loosened up a bit. She then started sitting down in the middle of her walks, as her legs must have been hurting her.
After talking to our vet, he referred us to Gary Clayton-Jones of the Highland Surgery in Tenterden in Kent, a well known veterinary orthopaedic surgeon (specialising in hip replacement surgery). We met with him, and he reviewed her X Rays (to make sure it was the hips that were the problem). He explained that there was a slight risk of about 5% of dogs experiencing a low grade infection in the hip joint after surgery, which was very difficult to cure, and which resulted sometimes in some lameness. However, we didn’t really have a choice by then. She was clearly in more and more discomfort.
One of my concerns was also the amount of time that she would have to spend in the Vets to recover. He astounded me by saying that she would be in in the morning and home by tea time! He believes that dogs recover far better at home with their owners.
Sure enough on the day, she had a pre med injection about 10 am and we went off to spend the day in a nearby town. We rang at 2pm and the surgery was completed and had gone well - huge sighs of relief from me and my husband and a celebratory cup of tea! We collected her at 4pm. Even anaesthetised she wanted to try and walk on it! The back legs are “hobbled” together with a soft rope bandage, so that she couldn’t take big steps, or do the splits, and this didn’t seem to bother her. She was walking around reasonably well in 3 – 4 days. After 10 days the hobble came off and the stitches came out. Then we had to limit her exercise to lead walks of 10 minutes building this up each time. She had to have lead walking only for 8 – 10 weeks, and at the end of 8 weeks was bursting to have a run. I didn’t take any chances and kept her to the 10 week lead walking. After that she was off lead, and no-one could tell of the surgery she’d had (except for half her coat missing).
People honestly looked at me in disbelief if it came up in conversation that she ‘d had a hip replacement, having seen her chase squirrels (and their dog, probably), chase her ball and swim – better than she had since before she was two. Most dogs only have one hip replaced, but her other hip needed doing and we had that one done a year later. It held no fears for us now. Neither she nor we ever looked back. With hindsight, the problem she experienced with her other leg was probably more to do with the spondylosis she also had.
Sadly we had to have her put to sleep on 3 December (aged nearly 10). The spondylosis finally progressed to where it compressed her spinal cord, and she lost the use of her legs overnight. Words cannot explain how much it hurt to let her go or how much I miss her.
She was courageous, gentle, funny and kind. Buying her the rest of her life was the best thing I’ve ever done. I hope her story helps other dogs and owners facing the same problem.
If you have any other questions I will happily answer them.
I wish you a long a happy life with your dog, let me know how it goes, I really would like to know.
Katrina (and Blue, gone but with me still)