By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Although they don't carry a donor card, four-legged
furry blood donors are just as essential for their kind as
humans are to their's. Dogs and
cats often give blood to save other pets' lives, said Lisa
Halford, the supervising technician in small animal internal
medicine/ICU at Mississippi State University's College of
Veterinary Medicine. Animal
trauma victims, puppies with parvovirus, chemotherapy
patients, and those undergoing major surgery or amputations
often need blood transfusions or blood products. As with
humans, blood must be readily available or the patient
dies. Halford,
a certified veterinary technician, said to meet its
patients' blood needs, the CVM keeps blood donor animals
available, and some workers volunteer their own pets if
needed. Dog blood can be frozen in blood banks, but cat
blood is difficult to maintain and usually is drawn as
needed, Halford said. MSU has
three cats and eight dogs available to donate blood. The
cats rarely give blood, but the dogs donate about once every
four to six weeks, Halford said. MSU
blood donor dogs must at least weigh 50 pounds and be 12 to
18 months old. Dogs are typically kept three years as
donors, then are adopted by screened families and usually
keep ties with the veterinary college. While donors, they
are given monthly mini-physicals, weigh-ins, blood checks
and heartworm preventative medicine. Health
maintenance is a priority. The dogs are dewormed every three
months and their teeth are cleaned every three to four
months as needed. Every six months a veterinarian makes a
full blood count and checks for blood parasites. Yearly, the
dogs receive complete physicals and vaccinations. Jason
Peters, a certified veterinary technician who works closely
with MSU's lab animals, said technicians and caregivers
daily check each dog's condition and monitor exercise
sessions. When the
big day arrives for a blood donation, the dogs are ready,
typically having learned the routine by the second time. The
dogs are placed on a table where they stretch out and lie
still, Peters said. "They
know exactly what to do," he said. It takes
about 10 minutes to draw the 450 milliliters (nearly one
pint) of blood from each dog, Halford said. Afterwards, the
dog is bandaged, fed two cans of its favorite food and
placed in ICU for two to three hours of
observation. "We
don't spare any expense on these dogs because they're saving
other dogs' lives," Halford said. "They even act like they
take pride in what they do." After
leaving ICU, the dog is not allowed to run around and
exercise for one day. A veterinarian always checks the dog's
health the next day. Halford
said there are six major types of blood in dogs, but 98
percent have the "DEA4" blood type. Because of this,
matching a donor's blood with the recipient's is usually
easy, although a veterinarian checks to make sure the blood
is compatible. Cats
have three types of blood, "A" which is very common, "B"
which is not as frequent and "AB" which is rare, Halford
said. When cats require blood, they are given whole blood
rather than components, which dogs usually
receive. Cats
must weigh at least 10 pounds to be a blood donor and can
give between 40 and 50 milliliters each time. Similar health
checks and observations are made for blood-donor
cats. With
animal blood banks in short supply, it is important for
veterinary clinics to have donor animals on hand. "If we
didn't have blood donors, we would lose a lot of lives,"
Halford said. "If we had a seriously bleeding animal come
into the clinic, we wouldn't have the time to order the
blood we need from a distant blood bank." Released:
March 17, 1997
Animal
Health
Animal Blood
Donors Meet Urgent Needs
Contact: Lisa Halford, (601) 325-1052
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:46
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm97/970317lh.htm
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