Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Puppy had brain injury and seizures after being swung at birth
By Grundy, Sophie A et al.·Published in Topics in companion animal medicine·2009·VCA Sacramento Animal Medical Group, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Intracranial trauma in a dog due to being "swung" at birth.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A newborn male Labrador Retriever puppy started having seizures just 8 hours after birth. The puppy was part of a large litter and required resuscitation at birth due to breathing issues. Unfortunately, despite initial efforts to help him, the seizures continued, and the decision was made to euthanize him. A necropsy revealed severe brain injuries consistent with trauma from being swung during resuscitation, highlighting the dangers of this practice in newborn puppies.
People also search for: puppy seizures after birth · Labrador Retriever neonatal care · dangers of swinging newborn puppies
Abstract
A male Labrador Retriever neonate presented for evaluation 8 hours after birth because of the onset of generalized seizure activity. The neonate was one of 8 puppies delivered over a 19-hour period to a 4-year-old female Labrador Retriever at an assistance dog breeding colony. Uterine and fetal heart monitoring were performed during the first and second stages of labor; secondary uterine inertia was diagnosed 10 hours after the onset of stage-1 labor. In addition to standard medical therapy, manual assistance was provided for the delivery of all but the second puppy (feathering, pulling, elevating forequarters, abdominal compression). The puppy presented was the third puppy born. At birth, resuscitation efforts were instituted because of a lack of spontaneous breathing and bradycardia. In an effort to remove amniotic fluid from the airways, the puppy was "swung" by an experienced attendee in an arch from mid-abdomen height to knee height while cradled in both hands with the head stabilized. Initial evaluation of the puppy revealed normal blood glucose and no ultrasonographic evidence of hydrocephalus. Because of continued seizure activity, euthanasia and necropsy were elected. At necropsy, there was gross evidence of subdural hematoma formation. Subsequent histopathology of the brain, liver, lung, spleen, small intestine, colon, and kidney revealed subdural and intracerebral hemorrhage. Findings were consistent with high-velocity deceleration trauma ("shaken baby syndrome"). Traditional neonatal resuscitation via "swinging" is a dangerous and potentially lethal practice capable of inducing significant brain trauma in the canine neonate.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19501346/