Guest TinasTroops Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 I am posting my communication with Dr Couto in hopes others may also have some suggestions on how to help Day. I wanted to ask you your thoughts on a Greyhound Corn case. I have a client that suspected her greyhound had 1 corn and was protective of the foot so ask us to be very careful when trimming his nails. This Greyhound is EXTREMELY protective of his feet and will normally not allow anyone near his feet to trim his nails, so we decided to muzzle him. I was able to evaluate his feet and was surprised to see that he had not 1 corn but 4 or 5, 2 feet have 1 corn each and the 3rd has at least 2! The issue is that this greyhound will not permit ANYONE near his feet to complete any of the application that may help ease or remove the corns, dremeling or hauling the corns would have to be under aesthetic. I have educated the owner on the corns and advised that hauling them will only be a temporary fix. This is along side a rear leg hock break that ended his career, which also has a sizable amount of calcification around the break, I am sure he also has arthritis in the area and is not on any supplementation. So I am asking what you would suggest as a course of action to help Day with his corns? Response from Dr Couto Thanks Tina. Sounds like he will need drugs for any reasonable approach. We use butorphanoil/acepromazine, and if necessary, we reverse the ton. I would remove them, since he is so painful. Booties may help, but he may not wear them (i.e.; foot fetish). Tough case… I would not do more than a one-digit neurectomy. SOunds like they are in different footpads,eh. Anyone have any other idea or suggestions to help Day. Boots are not an option, he really will not let you near his feet! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rascalsmom Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 No advice, but that poor, poor dog. Jack has a corn on each of three feet, but fortunately he is tolerant of me hulling them/putting various things on them. I am not at all an expert on corns, but I have read (GT and the Yahoo corndog group) where a few dogs responded to antibiotics--azirthromycin and clindamycin were two that were mentioned. I would be tempted to try one or both of those with a dog who is so protective of his feet. Lots of hugs for that poor corndog. Quote Phoebe (Belle's Sweetpea) adopted 9/2/13. Jack (BTR Captain Jack) 9/28/05--11/2/12Always missing Buddy, Ruby, and Rascal. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yamaha_gurl Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 Perhaps start training him that it's ok to touch feet? Treat when touching feet, muzzled of course. Quote Greyhound Collars : www.collartown.ca Maggie (the human servant), with Miss Bella, racing name "A Star Blackieto" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest TinasTroops Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 In all my years Maggie, I have never scene a greyhound this protective of their feet. Had he not been muzzled the first time he would have bit Eric in the face! Conversing with Dr Couto any applications would have to be completed under sedation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tbhounds Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 May be extreme but, is denerving the feet/toes an option? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest TinasTroops Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 Dr Couto will only recomend doing 1 digit denerving. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rascalsmom Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 I never heard of 'denerving'....interesting concept, since there seems to be NOTHING to make these horrible things go away forever. Quote Phoebe (Belle's Sweetpea) adopted 9/2/13. Jack (BTR Captain Jack) 9/28/05--11/2/12Always missing Buddy, Ruby, and Rascal. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rickiesmom Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 I wonder if giving him bee propolis orally would be worth a try. I believe Xan had success with this, not sure how many others have tried it. It's the one thing I can think of that doesn't involve touching his feet, and it's not expensive. Poor pupper. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest TinasTroops Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 Thanks Mary, I was gonna suggest that as a start and see how that goes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rascalsmom Posted April 16, 2012 Share Posted April 16, 2012 Yes, I heard of someone else giving bee propolis orally, and it helped. Definitely worth a try. That's what I am going to try next with Jack if the "Wart Ade" doesn't work. Quote Phoebe (Belle's Sweetpea) adopted 9/2/13. Jack (BTR Captain Jack) 9/28/05--11/2/12Always missing Buddy, Ruby, and Rascal. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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