Added: 5 years ago
From: advancedvetcare
Views: 69,351
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (22)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • my dog Lili had this a couple of days ago, she had an incurable ear infection which made her deaf and was soon beginning to really irritate her (scratching ect.). had to be done because it will soon stop her from walking straight :/

    i dont understand in the video, the cut the vet made was about 2 inches!!! my dogs' is just 3cms at the most

  • @myPageinputs my dog is getting that surgery done monday :( did you say she was deaf after the surgey? i'm so scared for my baby :(

  • is still the dog alive?

  • Thank you for posting this. I'm a Veterinary Technician and always wondered what this procedure looked like.

  • it's a dog's ear LOL

  • Omg. what about the eardrumb?!?! Looked like he just cut the dogs ear off!

  • fuck this bitch i hate u

  • what the fuck is that___?????

  • why did they remove the eardrum in this dog? Was the infection that bad? Poor dog.......

    I can't feel my legs....lol

  • Thanks for posting this.

    My dog is due to have this op and now i know what the vet will be doing!

  • oh my gosh i cant feel my legs...

  • 1:16

  • thank you for this educational video, i wanna be prepared for veterinary.

  • you no im 12 lol i love blood, i wanna be a vet can eny 1 send me some more animal operations?!

  • Thank you! I'm glad the need to preserve the facial nerve was stressed. Though ablations are one of my least favorite surgeries to scrub in on (I'm a tech), they are interesting. I haven't been involved in one for years since I went from day practice to ER only.

  • TECAs are done for severe ear infections, especially inner ear infections or severe external infections with stenotic or narrowed canals.

  • Thanks a lot for giving this information. Our Bluey dog just went through an ablation and is recovering from the operation. Before that she was suffering from constant ear infections caused by bacterias that were resistant to antibiotics and all medication. After the wounds have heeled we expect to get a healthy and playful dog again.

  • Very cool. So why do you do a total ear canal ablation?

    You need some longer delays on your intervening labeled pictures (didn't see them the first time through)

  • ew ew ew that is disgusting

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more