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I am writing this post with great pain and heartache. For those who personally know me, you will be aware how much Ah Bee, my miniature schnauzer, means to me. He came into our lives 12 years ago, and I have always regarded him as my first child.
We have enjoyed and celebrated many milestones together; from competitions and photoshoots to birthday celebrations and staycations. In recent years, as age caught up with him, he unfortunately developed bilateral cataracts which caused him to have reduced vision. Thus, we made the decision to send him for elective cataract surgery at Mount Pleasant in May It proved to be the worst decision in our lives because the surgery was eventually a total failure; he developed glaucoma in his right eye and this required round-the-clock eyedrops to control his ocular pressure.
Thankfully, his left eye was not treated during the surgery and he was still able to retain some vision in his left eye with cataract. We have presumed that the success rates for cataract surgery is high as it is a common surgery for humans. Nonetheless, we have underestimated that animal medicine is far less advanced and the standards could not be comparable to human medicine. Was he pure unlucky to suffer the complications of blindness from an elective cataract surgery?
Or was the skill and expertise of the surgeon and facility care questionable? If we knew the odds were against us, we would have not gone ahead with the procedure.
Afternote: It turns out that the surgeon who operated on Ah Bee is not an veterinary eye specialist by training. Read my post on The phone call from Mount Pleasant. Without a doubt, when things go wrong, one will start to question the training and expertise of this doctor.