Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - (Page 154) Mind Over Miller musings from Dr. Robert M. Miller The eyes have it and tending to their wounds desensitizes a lot of women. Have you noticed how often when a couple brings in a pet to have an abscess drained, an eye infection treated, or a nasty wound cleaned up or for some other odorous or nastylooking procedure, the woman looks on with great interest while the man retreats and looks elsewhere or sits down suddenly and gets quiet? But more than seeing blood, more than glimpsing viscera, more than watching a purulent mass being incised, nothing staggers the laity like seeing an injured eye. A Pekingese with a prolapsed eyeball is a classic example. That really gets to people. California sunshine, along with similar concerns involving the ears in white cats, collie nose in certain breeds, and cancer of unpigmented and hairless areas of the body in Paint and Appaloosa horses. I tried to train my cattle clients to watch for the earliest signs of neoplasia. If I could get to those “cancer eye” cows before the lesions were larger than a pea, I had great success in cauterizing them with a hyfrecator. In order to do this, with the cow standing in a squeeze chute, I administered regional anesthesia with a Peterson block and then prolapsed Robert M. Miller, DVM, is an author and a cartoonist, speaker, and Veterinary Medicine Practitioner Advisory Board member from Thousand Oaks, Calif. His thoughts in “Mind Over Miller” are drawn from 32 years as a mixed-animal practitioner. Visit his Web site at www.robertmmiller.com. A s every practitioner knows, men are more likely to faint or get sick to their stomachs watching some of our more gory procedures than are women. I guess cleaning up after infants But more than seeing blood, nothing staggers the laity like seeing an injured eye. Back when my practice was 50% beef cattle and the white-faced Hereford breed completely dominated the ranches in my area, we saw an enormous amount of squamous cell carcinoma of the eyeball. These tumors were one of the negative aspects of the eyeball from its socket. This technique immobilized the globe and allowed me to treat it before popping it back in place. Somewhere between levering the eyeball out of the socket, using the handle of an operating scissor, and popping the eyeball back in once I was done is when some cowboys would collapse. Some would just keel over and pass out. Others would stagger away, sit down, turn pale, and say something like, “I must have ate something bad.” Some cowboys would reel and vomit, most in a direction away from my patient. But one I remember vomited all over the cow’s neck. I remember thinking, “Hmm! Projectile vomiting!” Of course it was never the eye that caused the reaction. Of course not. It was that morning’s breakfast or the previous evening’s supper. Over the course of a decade, on one purebred polled Hereford ranch with a couple of hundred head of cattle, I treated every eye in the herd at least once. The rancher always managed to be busy elsewhere when I was ready to prolapse an eye. I never had a complaint about my fee either. 154 March 2009 VETERINARY MEDICINE The views expressed in “Mind Over Miller” do not necessarily reflect those of the editorial and practitioner advisory boards or the editorial staff. http://www.robertmmiller.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 Contents Letters Correction Author Guidelines Hot Literature Idea Exchange A Challenging Case Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques The Latest Scoop on Litter Product Preview CE Form/Advertiser Index Marketplace/Classifieds Mind Over Miller Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - (Page Intro) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 (Page Cover1) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 (Page Cover2) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 (Page 107) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 (Page 108) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 (Page 109) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 (Page 110) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Contents (Page 111) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Contents (Page 112) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Contents (Page 113) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Contents (Page 114) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Contents (Page 115) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Correction (Page 116) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Correction (Page 117) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Correction (Page 118) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Author Guidelines (Page 119) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Hot Literature (Page 120) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Hot Literature (Page 121) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Idea Exchange (Page 122) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Idea Exchange (Page 123) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Idea Exchange (Page 124) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Idea Exchange (Page 125) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - A Challenging Case (Page 126) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - A Challenging Case (Page 127) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - A Challenging Case (Page 128) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - A Challenging Case (Page 129) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 130) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 131) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 132) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 133) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 134) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 135) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 136) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 137) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 138) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Local and Regional Anesthesia Techniques (Page 139) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - The Latest Scoop on Litter (Page 140) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - The Latest Scoop on Litter (Page 141) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - The Latest Scoop on Litter (Page 142) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - The Latest Scoop on Litter (Page 143) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - The Latest Scoop on Litter (Page 144) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - The Latest Scoop on Litter (Page 145) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Product Preview (Page 146) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Product Preview (Page 147) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Product Preview (Page 148) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Product Preview (Page 149) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - CE Form/Advertiser Index (Page 150) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 151) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 152) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 153) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page 154) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page Cover3) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page Cover4) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page A1) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page A2) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page A3) Veterinary Medicine - March 2009 - Mind Over Miller (Page A4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.