When you place your pet in our hands, you trust us to provide your pet with the best possible medical care. You expect us to provide you with the advice which will allow you to make the best decision for your pet. In order to offer you the peace of mind you deserve, we recommend pre-anesthetic testing prior to placing your pet under anesthesia.
As in human medicine, the anesthetics available for anesthetizing pets are extremely safe. As a result, the anesthetic risk is greatly minimized when a healthy pet is placed under anesthesia. However, if your pet is not healthy, complications can occur both during and after the anesthetic procedure. Therefore, in order to minimize potential risk associated with anesthesia, it is vital for us to know the complete health status of your pet before placing him or her under anesthesia.
Prior to anesthesia, we will obtain a complete history and perform a detailed physical exam on your pet. While a history and physical exam provide us with important information about your pet's health, it cannot provide a complete picture of your pet's health. Pre-anesthetic "Bloodwork Testing" provides us an insight as to what is occurring internally. If the results of the test are within the normal ranges, we can proceed with confidence knowing the anesthetic risk is minimized.
On the other hand, if the results are not within the normal ranges, we may proceed as planned yet provide the additional medical support needed to ensure your pet's health for his or her condition. In other cases, the test abnormalities may be significant enough to postpone the procedure in order to monitor and treat your pet.
Performing these tests significantly minimizes the risk to your pet and provides you and us with peace of mind. Bloodwork is also recommended on a routine basis for our older pets, cats seven years and older, dogs six years and older to pick up problems early.
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A complete pre-anesthetic panel includes: Albumin: reduced levels can indicate liver or
kidney disease or parasitic infections Complete blood count (or CBC) also checks red blood cell and white blood cell numbers and structures. It indicates infections, viral and bacterial, some cancers, anemia and other red blood cell diseases. |
We are proud to be a accredited AAHA hospital. The American Animal Hospital Association is an organization that accredits animal hospitals in the U.S. and Canada. AAHA-accredited hospitals voluntarily choose to be evaluated on over 800 standards to become a AAHA accredited petcare facility.
We also carry the award winning Royal Canin pet food line. Royal Canin has been a forerunner in nutritional research for over 40 years and offers pet food with high-quality nutrient formulas