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Darcy had this exact problem. She was spayed about 7 weeks ago, and has show real irritation at the incision site -- first, at one end, then at the other end (I think she pulled out part of the suture, herself)
It all looked healed and well until a few days ago - then the MIDDLE section of her incision was puffy and inflamed and pink, with a red dot in the middle. I took her straight to the vet - they drained it and said it was infected, and put her on antibiotics. They said her body was having a reaction to the sutures (rejecting them). She's looking better, 3 days into the antibiotics, but I really question the original surgery. I've had five dogs before Darcy, and not one of them had these kinds of issues with the spaying - especially 2 months afterward!
Oh -- and they said they'd take out Darcy's baby teeth during the surgery, but for some reason they didn't. Last week, I noticed that ALL FOUR of her canines had been growing in beside her baby teeth. She essentially had 2 sets of teeth for each canine! Took her to a different vet and had them removed under sedation.
So, poor thing, because of the teeth removal and incision infection, she can't have her usual hard food, can't "run, jump, play" (vet's words) and can't really have any chew toys just yet (she accidentally got hold of one and started chewing, and I saw blood on it).
Not a common problem. It has been some time since I had a dog spayed. I didn't like the sutures that didn't desolve. I disliked the feel of them when you petted the dogs tummy. On one of my girls on occasions she got skin irritation due to it. She was my therapy dog. Had to treat it when she got inflammed.
Well, looks like Darcy's ordeal isn't over yet. She got through a round of antibiotics a week ago, and now, yet another spot of her incision is looking infected again. Thankfully, because of the internet, I knew to expect this (the vet said her body was "rejecting" the sutures). I've read somewhere that it can take months for the sutures to either dissolve or expel themselves (or, at an extreme, a vet would have to go in and remove them).
I hate that an otherwise-healthy dog is just sidelined with these problems (the vet's instructions - don't let her jump, run, or play - good grief!). I'm sure Darcy's in pain, or at the least, is irritated by these constant lesions/infections. Poor baby!!
Sorry Darcy's having to go threw this. I sure hope they dissolve soon. Find out the kind they used and make sure if she has to have future surgury that they do not use them. My vet would let me know. Good luck. Hope She is up and running soon.
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