Saturday, January 30, 2010

Testical My 7 Month Old Male Dog Only Has One Testical. Will There Be Complications When I Have Him Neutered?

My 7 month old male dog only has one testical. Will there be complications when I have him neutered? - testical

Help! My 7 months has fallen puppies testicles is. I've heard that the surgery is more complex neutral and open, the doctor must get the stomach to the other testicle.

It is neutral on postoperative complications?
Would not it be better to neutral?

5 comments:

Tammy D said...

Has your dog, what a unilateral cryptorchidism () in retained testicles. Unilateral Cryptorchidism is the failure of the testes descend into the scrotum. This is the most common disorders of sexual development in dogs. In most cases, the condition is hereditary, and therefore the animal must be sterilized to prevent the disease is passed on to the next generation. The retained testicle, the animal would degenerate after puberty hits. Animals with the condition must be neutered, because the tumors continue to fight cancer tend to develop within the testicles.

The surgical procedure is very similar to the castration of a woman. First, the testes increased by a cut away on the underside of the penis. If the doctor can feel (felt with the hands) of restraint testicle is then cut and remove the testicles. If he can not feel the doctor, the testicles, then he or she will make an abdominal incision and begin to follow the kidney and the inguinal canal for the testiAss and removed it.
Sometimes it is involved in inflammation of the operation for cryptorchidism, a neutral standard for most physicians, a painkiller that has anti-inflammatory in it to prescribe.

Qatie said...

It is absolutely advisable not to leave intact. Testes, which do not, 3-10 times more often from cancer. Even people who ask if the dogs should be neutered and regularly agree that () retained the deadline must be an undescended testicle in the body, the animals must be neutered for their health. He has never ever been a case of an animal with only one testicle. The other is surely somewhere.

The risk of complications (for example, that something is wrong do not differ with the operation and the impact on the health of your pet) from a routine castration. Operation for the distance is an undescended testicle is very much like castration, because usually the abdomen should be opened. Abdominal surgery always classified as the more complicated than most superficial surgical procedures, such as the elimination of the normal testis.

Cryptorchid are neutral, quite frankly, a scandal, because the testes could be hiding somewhere in the groin and kidneys. But they are not more dangerous than castration. When Castro. If left intact, it might really bEA punishment for your dog.

Dogs are the kindest creatures said...

Since the dog has a testicle that my one important reason is it neutered. He works in the line of dogs who do not want another dog and puppies who have problems .. impregnate

My dog has had this problem, remove, fortunately, his testicles still fall a few days before the surgery, but all were ready to come and pull it down, and

Surgery, since it is a little more expensive, but not complicated, and it is a genetic defect, which in many dogs. Even a routine operation.

I would not make too worried.

But even more reasons than ever to obtain the sterilization.


We are very pleased that our little guy, because he other health problems, has developed genetic, and if for some reason has been produced in large quantities and had a woman becomes pregnant castrated, I felt so bad, that knowledge of the problems that She experiences. In addition, we would not have been able to take our women sterilized ()

Dogs are the kindest creatures said...

Since the dog has a testicle that my one important reason is it neutered. He works in the line of dogs who do not want another dog and puppies who have problems .. impregnate

My dog has had this problem, remove, fortunately, his testicles still fall a few days before the surgery, but all were ready to come and pull it down, and

Surgery, since it is a little more expensive, but not complicated, and it is a genetic defect, which in many dogs. Even a routine operation.

I would not make too worried.

But even more reasons than ever to obtain the sterilization.


We are very pleased that our little guy, because he other health problems, has developed genetic, and if for some reason has been produced in large quantities and had a woman becomes pregnant castrated, I felt so bad, that knowledge of the problems that She experiences. In addition, we would not have been able to take our women sterilized ()

bethanne said...

One of my cats had a testicle undecended, and whether surgery can be a little more complicated, it really depends on the size of the abdominal cavity tests other is (my cat is the hidden gem "was sitting inside the abdominal wall, and the EFF has not become a major to do surgery.

Ask your vet exactly what the operation is necessary because often the test is right, remove the scrotum and the veterinarian in the area, only the testes through the opening of the scrotum to remove it. If there is a problem would be "very high in the abdomen" wanders the test.

AND YES, please neutrally your dog.

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