Pet Adoption Stories
Bonnie's Big Break
William Childress
In June 2002 at the Sacramento SPCA, my wife Diane and I
adopted a damaged dog. Her right front leg had been crushed,
presumably by a car; untreated, it had healed awkwardly, and now
resembled a seal's flipper. Even so, the dog danced around like a
flea on a hot plate. Her cage card said her name was Bonnie, and
it classified her as very loving (true) and very active
(true!).
Bonnie was a stray. No one knew when she'd been born, or how
long she had run wild, but SPCA officials set her age at a year
and a half. With her twisted foot, she was unlikely to be
adopted, and her future was cloudy. Scars on her forehead
indicated she'd been attacked by other dogs, probably several
times. After we'd had her a few weeks, Diane and I realized that
her experiences had made her "dog aggressive," a behavioral
condition we would eventually have to deal with.
Why take such a dog home?
My first impulse is to say that my wife is so nuts about
animals, she'd adopt a wolverine. But Bonnie's salesmanship also
played a role. Her pitch would have impressed a carnival barker.
She stood on her hind legs, yipped, spun around, and leaped
against the mesh of her pen. She pulled out all the stops,
barking and displaying her amazingly long tongue.
"Let me lick you!" she yelped. "You'll take me home
then!"
With every stunt, my wife melted further. Soon she was
crooning like a new mother. The cunning canine promptly lay down
and rolled over - a trick she hasn't performed since. Finally,
when the SPCA volunteer took her into the get-acquainted room,
she showed the depth of her gratitude by making a puddle on the
floor.
"I want this dog," my wife said firmly. There was no
consultation. The smart husband will recognize when one isn't
necessary.
In the Eye of the Beholder...
Bonnie was a
beautiful dog by any standard, but she could have been the
Hunchback of Kennel Three and my wife would have taken her. Tan,
with orange highlights and creamy patches on her chest and rump,
she had golden-brown eyes and long, pointed ears. At a muscular
55 pounds, Bonnie reminded us of a dingo. Dingos, however, have
received bad press, so we started telling everyone she was an
ibizan hound. That both puzzled and impressed them, since ibizans
are rare in our neck of the woods. (A veterinarian would later
suggest she was a shepherd mix.)
When we adopted Bonnie, Mike Winters, the executive director
of the Sacramento SPCA - who for 20 years has helped grow the
organization into the modern, 30,000-square-foot facility it now
is - made a decision from the heart. Looking at her twisted foot,
he said, "If you decide to rehabilitate Bonnie, maybe we can help
a little." (I learned later that there was no fund for this
purpose.)
We told Winters we'd contact him after an orthopedist examined
our bouncing bowser. Two days later, we were at Sacramento
Veterinary Surgical Services, one of only three facilities for
specialized veterinary surgical procedures in the Sacramento
Valley.
Dr. D.W. Griffin would perform the initial exam and later, the
surgery. Bonnie would be sedated for the exam, so we returned the
next morning, when Dr. Griffin took X rays of both legs. He would
use the good leg as a pattern. As we studied the films, it was
obvious that Bonnie had a big problem. Running wild on her
crushed foot, she had totally distorted the bones and muscles. We
wondered how she had survived, especially when running from other
dogs.
Tough Choices
"This is an interesting case..." Dr. Griffin began.
Ka-ching!
"Not a terribly rare case, but one that will require special
procedures and a lot of patience if we are to return her leg to
some semblance of normalcy."
Ka-ching!
"Can she be cured?" my wife asked, clearly not hearing the
same sound effects that I was. "That's all that matters."
She shot me a glance that said, Be afraid, be very
afraid.
As if I would interfere with a mother and her child.
"We can improve her condition," responded Dr. Griffin. "But at
best, corrective osteotomy rarely restores more than 80 percent
of the original mobility. There'll also be scars, and the
curative process is lengthy - as much as five or six months." He
paused, obviously reluctant to mention another
possibility.
"You could also consider amputation. Dogs do quite well on
three legs. And to be frank, the prognosis for corrective
osteotomies is guarded."
"No amputation," my wife said firmly. "Only if nothing else
works."
That night, Diane and I dug up the coffee can in the backyard,
counted the contents and summed it all up with, "Bank
loan!"
Some folks might think I had a blithe attitude toward our
dog's problem, but Bonnie herself is blithe. In fact she's the
soul of good cheer, whose constant clowning and zany behavior
helped us all through months of waiting (for us) and pain (for
her).
Under the Knife
We opted for surgery, and Dr. Griffin assembled his team. In
addition to himself were Dr. Jennifer Arnold, Dr. Steven Tarver
and surgical technician/anesthetist Danielle Carey.
"The original trauma produced a growth plate deformity," Dr.
Griffin explained. "Bonnie's wrist stopped growing normally, is
bent 90 degrees to the side, and her foot is nonfunctional. To
attempt realignment, we can use a bone plate and screws, or an
external skeletal fixator."
Bone plates are the time-honored method, and Dr. Griffin (who
called Bonnie "The Maniac") felt they might work best, given her
energy level. Carey administered anesthesia, and Doctors Griffin,
Tarver and Arnold began the task of incising skin and tissues to
expose the bones and tendons of the foreleg.
A drastic rotation would be necessary to overcome months of
damage as Bonnie ran on the side of her foot. Dr. Griffin cut
tiny wedges of bone from the radius and the ulna, ground them up,
and after aligning the bones, sprinkled the bone dust back into
the wound so the nutrients could be absorbed. Then he screwed on
the plate and closed the incision.
Bonnie would face high pain levels. Following surgery, she was
put on morphine for two days. When the worst pain was past, she
wore a Fentanyl® patch for slow, regular administration of
the analgesic. Acepromazine, a sedative, was given "as needed" in
an attempt to control Bonnie's exuberant behavior and keep the
bones from destabilizing. We made good use of the "ace."
But four weeks later, Bonnie was back in the hospital.
"The plates won't work for such an active dog," said Dr.
Griffin. "Now we'll try the external fixator, which hindsight
tells me may have been a better first choice."
Our banker was a nice man who liked Bonnie, but we figured one
stiff loan was his limit. Meanwhile, true to his word, Mike
Winters of the Sacramento SPCA sent his contribution. But with
$2,700 already invested, we were facing an eventual price tag of
$5,000 or more, just to fix a leg. We're folks who save coupons
and are happy for theater discounts, so we said, sadly, that we
just couldn't do it.
Dr. Griffin smiled. "Actually, we were thinking of making
Bonnie a project. Her condition is unusual enough to serve as a
learning aid for interns, and the hospital would pay expenses, if
you're willing."
Willing?
If Bonnie hadn't been spayed, I'd give him a pup! In fact, I'd
give him several!
Under the Knife Again
The fixator is external, not screw-plated to the bone, so it's
much stronger. Stainless steel pins are screwed through the
fractures to stabilize them, then anchored to the fixator and
tightened or loosened with a tiny wrench.
Because the pins stick out and snag things, a bun-shaped
bandage is wound around the device. External fixators are used to
stabilize fractures and immobilize joints, and consist of three
units: transfixion pins for holding large bone fragments,
external connectors to support fractures and linkage devices to
attach and hold pins and connectors in place.
Even when wearing a cast, which she did for months, Bonnie's
energy was phenomenal and her strength astonishing. She would
leap high into the air with her powerful hind legs, trusting us
to catch her before she crashed down on the injured leg. I called
her Supermutt and threatened to put a cape on her.
During this period, exercise was vital. It strengthened the
muscles and made the bones knit more quickly. Far from objecting,
Bonnie hobbled along briskly, her leg clunking like Long John
Silver's. By the time the cast was changed each week, the old one
was a wreck.
Before long, Bonnie's "dog aggressiveness" returned. She would
see a dog and go berserk. Yipping, barking and snarling, she
hurled herself against her leash. But if she got too near and the
defender growled, Bonnie groveled and urinated. My wife, the
self-appointed walker of our kangaroo, finally agreed to let me
share in the delights of arms nearly dislocated by 55 pounds of
leaping dogflesh.
The cast and her pain made it impractical to take Bonnie for
obedience training, so we tried books and treats. No luck.
Obviously, Bonnie's early life had made an indelible imprint on
her that only professional trainers could ameliorate - more costs
that we hadn't figured on.
Surgery Number Three
Our spirits sank in early November when Dr. Griffin announced
that Bonnie's chances for a good, usable right front leg weren't
great. We might not reach the 80 percent improvement level after
all.
Despite all she'd been through, it seemed unlikely now that
Bonnie's new ankle joint would support her. Thus the team
operated a third and - Diane and I vowed - final time. Abandoning
the hope of a flexible new joint, Dr. Griffin turned to
arthrodesis, a procedure whereby a stainless steel plate was
implanted inside the leg to permanently "fix" the joint. Attached
to the bones with 10 stainless steel screws, the implant, which
may either remain in place forever or eventually be removed, will
allow the joint to fuse. So although Bonnie's wrist would be
stiff, the doctors felt she'd be able to walk and even run on it
successfully. Once again Bonnie was in a cast. "She still has a
ways to go," Dr. Griffin said. "It'll be Christmas before we can
free her from casts and splints entirely."
Bonnie would not leave the cast alone. Either from discomfort,
anxiety or both, she chewed on it constantly. Dr. Griffin
prescribed an "Elizabethan collar" and instructed that Bonnie was
to wear it day and night. But after a few days of watching her
darling dog struggle to maneuver in the clumsy headpiece, my wife
could bear no more. "I trust Bonnie," she declared, clearly
implying that my faith was a small, pathetic thing in comparison,
and she removed the collar. Bonnie immediately set on the cast
again, chewing at it and licking her wound until soon enough
she'd developed a nasty infection. A course of antibiotics was
begun, with weekly visits to remove the cast, cleanse the wound,
inspect the site for healing and the leg for stability. On
December 18, after a week or two of slow progress, we finally
heard some good news. The bones were knitting, Dr. Griffin felt
the infection would pass, and the date of January 3 was set for
removal of the cast. For the first time in nearly seven months,
Bonnie would be allowed to walk with nothing on her right front
leg. Short of gangrene, we hope to be done with vets, clinics,
casts and all at that point. We've already planned a 1,200-mile
road trip in mid-January - with Bonnie, of course.
Reflections
Bonnie's inconvenience has also been ours. We've been her
prisoners, because she couldn't go anywhere. Our vacation plans
were cancelled or modified. The price tag has surpassed $5,000.
Once a week, and sometimes more often, we made the 50-mile round
trip drive to the clinic, putting roughly 1,400 miles on our car.
By the time Bonnie is reasonably mobile, we'll have devoted seven
months of our life to one front leg.
If we had it to do over, would we do it again?
Absolutely.
This goofy, frenetic dog has brought us joy, laughter and
love. As my wife says, "She completes our family." Besides, we
both fell in love with her and her shenanigans at the Sacramento
SPCA.
Our children are grown and gone, so Bonnie is simply a new
challenge. As for Dr. David Griffin and his team, they did a
superb job with a difficult, long-neglected problem. We hope
they've learned enough from Bonnie's ordeal so that the interns
can help other dogs with orthopedic problems.
William Childress is retired from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
where his column received two Pulitzer Prize nominations. A
widely published writer/photographer, he's also a poet and the
author of five books, including An Ozark Odyssey (forthcoming
from So. Illinois Press). He lives near Sacramento with his wife,
Diane, and rebuilt dog, Bonnie.
© 2003 ASPCA
ASPCA Animal Watch - Spring 2003













