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Surgery
We provide many soft tissue and orthopedic surgical services at Clyde’s Animal Clinic. The types of surgeries we perform include:
- Spay/Neuter
- Laser Ear Crop
- Laser Tail Dock
- Laser Declaw
- Orthopedic surgery
- General surgery
- Eye surgery (for example, eye trauma and intropian eye surgery)
- Anal gland removal surgery
- Cryosurgery (freeze off skin tags and bumps)
- Emergency surgery (laceration repair, wound repair, foreign object removal)
We utilize laser surgery in as many surgical cases as we can. Surgery done with laser has minimal bleeding, decreased pain, minimal swelling and faster healing time. For example, cats that have had laser declaw surgery are able to walk a few hours after surgery.
Anesthesia and Patient Monitoring
We utilize the safest anesthesia options available and provide the same level of patient monitoring that you would receive if you were having surgery. We monitor all of your pet’s vital signs with state-of-the-art equipment as well as manual techniques. We recommend pre-surgical blood work, so we can evaluate your pet’s kidney, liver and heart function prior to undergoing anesthesia.
Pets are monitored during surgery (pulse ox, respiratory monitoring, EKG, temperature monitoring, ventilator, oxygen)
Pain Management
Your pet’s pain relief is our top priority. At Clyde’s Animal Clinic, we ensure your pet has minimal pain before, during and after their surgery. We utilize multiple therapies to control pain so that your pet is as comfortable as possible until they are fully recovered.
Your Pet's 2012 Resolution:
Help them get Healthy!
As the New Year begins and we make our new year's resolution to lose weight, let's not forget to add our overweight pets into the plan. As reward-based training becomes more popular, so does pet obesity. This is a serious issue and obesity is a leading contributor to diabetes in pets. Overeating, a predisposition for obesity, lack of exercise and eating the wrong types of food are the most likely causes of your pet's weight gain. Overweight pets may be suffering physically as a result of carrying the extra weight, and obese pets, like obese humans, do not live as long as their more active and weight appropriate counterparts. Obesity in pets is a condition over which the owner has significant control.


