> Has anybody else dealt with bone spurs at all? What did you do?
I have bone spurs
myself, on the back of each ankle. I was diagnosed at 4yrs old with them (I'm 36 now). The Dr.s wouldn't operate until I was 16yrs old. By the time I was 16 I was getting less problems with them, so I never had the operation.
The pain is hard to describe the best way I can describe it, is when my spurs are playing up, it feels as if my heel bones have been chewed on by a crododile a few days ago and now they've seized up! Not that I know what that actually feels like, but I imagine it would feel like that! For me, the feeling I need to limp is from the stiff, seized up feeling, rather than pain.
Personally I would not take pain killers for my spurs,, it's not the sort of pain that, to me, warrents it, but, unlike a dog, I do know
why they are hurting and I know that by forcing myself to NOT limp (no matter how much my body is trying to make me limp) it helps.
I also know what triggers mine off now - changes in terrain, amount of walking and/or shoes. For example I can walk 2 miles into town no problems, if I do that in a new/different pair of shoes, I feel it afterwards. Or if I walk for 2 miles through woodland, I'll feel it (I'm not used to walking in woodland, with the ground all up & down and varying levels of traction).
Basically doing anything different than my feet are used to, will trigger things for me. When they do play up, massaging/rubbing the area helps.
If my dog had them, I would make sure his exercise was always the same, I'd massage his hurty bits when he needed it.
My dog has elbow displasia that is managed by controlled excersise, and just like me, even a change in terrain can cause him problems (ie, lumpier grass than normal or more up-hill than normal). It took a while to get his walks right for him, but he's at a point where it's only been once per year, for 5 days a time that he's needed any pain relief, and that's been because he's hurt himself by stumbling.
Good luck.