bird-brain
02-09-2011, 02:49 PM
First I want to thank all of you for your kind words and the support you have offered me since the death of my lil Tango. I know i have been a basket case. But something was just needling at me that I could not put my finger on. I am a Clinical Research Associate by trade and so lab values and cell morphology MATTERS to me. There were ,some things that were inconsistent, things that should have been reported that weren't etc. They had not been able to do a WBC on him because of the condition of the blood sample which made me wonder if the crit count was even correct. A bird with a crit of 22 should not have been able to stand let alone fly around a room so it just didn't jive. Soooooooooo, I had a copy of Tango's labs and necropsy results faxed to me.
The only real finding was "abundant hemorrhage in the trachea and crop". There was a 3.5 cm blood clot in the ventral aspect of the neck adjacent to the area of the lab draw. The pathologist hypothesized that the lab draw itself caused the hemorrhage.
Now guys, I am a reasonable person. I know that lab draws on tiny birds is a dangerous procedure that sometimes does not go well. It is heart breaking to think that Tango likely had the same infection that Cabo is being treated for but did not survive the trauma of the lab draw. I hate that, but I could have lived with it as one of those things that just happens.
What has kept me up at night was concern of some bigger enemy lurking unseen. A lead or zinc source, or other toxin or viral process that was going to rear its head again in another of my fids. Instead I find out that it was likely human error that caused Tango's death and rather than be honest, my vet chose to mislead me. I was only told of "abundant hemorrhage in the calvarium" and that it was possibly due to trauma. This was the initial red flag to me as trauma would have likely caused meningeal hemorrhage as well and that it was only seen in the calvarium is typical post mortem artifact and would probably not have been attributed to trauma in the report (if the pathologist knows their stuff). The report was read to me incorrectly and I can think of no reason to do this other than to hide the fact that the bird exanguinated from his lab draw. The vet kept referencing him flying into a cabinet, it's in his medical record. He NEVER flew into a cabinet door! He couldn't fly. So we have even invented the trauma that caused this massive hemorrhage.
Okay, so wierdly, I am oddly grateful that I can stop looking for the monster under the bed. And other than that, I am just not really sure how I should handle this situation with the vet and the faked necropsy report. I am just in shock that the vet has been this dishonest and more than a little dissapointed that I now have to drive to Atlanta for all my avian vet needs..................
Seriously, would you guys address this further or just not return to this vet?
The only real finding was "abundant hemorrhage in the trachea and crop". There was a 3.5 cm blood clot in the ventral aspect of the neck adjacent to the area of the lab draw. The pathologist hypothesized that the lab draw itself caused the hemorrhage.
Now guys, I am a reasonable person. I know that lab draws on tiny birds is a dangerous procedure that sometimes does not go well. It is heart breaking to think that Tango likely had the same infection that Cabo is being treated for but did not survive the trauma of the lab draw. I hate that, but I could have lived with it as one of those things that just happens.
What has kept me up at night was concern of some bigger enemy lurking unseen. A lead or zinc source, or other toxin or viral process that was going to rear its head again in another of my fids. Instead I find out that it was likely human error that caused Tango's death and rather than be honest, my vet chose to mislead me. I was only told of "abundant hemorrhage in the calvarium" and that it was possibly due to trauma. This was the initial red flag to me as trauma would have likely caused meningeal hemorrhage as well and that it was only seen in the calvarium is typical post mortem artifact and would probably not have been attributed to trauma in the report (if the pathologist knows their stuff). The report was read to me incorrectly and I can think of no reason to do this other than to hide the fact that the bird exanguinated from his lab draw. The vet kept referencing him flying into a cabinet, it's in his medical record. He NEVER flew into a cabinet door! He couldn't fly. So we have even invented the trauma that caused this massive hemorrhage.
Okay, so wierdly, I am oddly grateful that I can stop looking for the monster under the bed. And other than that, I am just not really sure how I should handle this situation with the vet and the faked necropsy report. I am just in shock that the vet has been this dishonest and more than a little dissapointed that I now have to drive to Atlanta for all my avian vet needs..................
Seriously, would you guys address this further or just not return to this vet?