Noodle Tail - Picture1 Picture2 MoveClip - 10/17/2004 So Daisy and I get home from the Wiggle Waggle Walk yesterday and she is beat, and goes on my bed and she is out the rest of the day. I get home later on last night around 9pm and I notice something weird about Daisy. Her tail isn't straight, in fact, it's dangling. I take a closer look at her tail, I grab it, feel it up and down, I apply some pressure, I feel all around her legs, her back, her spine, all over her body and nothing. No crys or yelps, so I know she's not in any pain. Discomfort, maybe. I notice she will occasionally turn around and start nibbling at her tail, then licking the start area of her tail where it seems to be "dangling". I also noticed when she seems to be bothered by it, she will sit. I was thinking, well maybe she's sore from the walk. 3 miles is a long walk, but Daisy is used to running and being pretty active. Her and I play EXTREME ball about 3 or 4 days a week (EXTREME ball is when we actually play for more than a 1/2 hour. Maybe her back legs or back or spine is sore and it's bothering her tail for some reason. Can dogs get sore muscles? Overall, her personality is the same, she's eating the same, when she see's her ball, she jumps up on me and wants to play. I threw her ball this morning for her and she chased it with no problem like she normally does. I called the vet this afternoon and told him/the vet's assistant all the symptoms, he said if she's still eating, doesn't seem to be in pain when you touch it, or anywhere else on her body and if her personality hasn't changed, then to just keep an eye on her for the next couple days. He said maybe she's tired...hmmm. So that's what I'm going to do I guess. I'll give it a couple days and see what happens. I'll keep you updated on what happens. ------------------- PART 2 - 10/21/2004 Okay, I'm pretty sure we know what happened here. From a lot of help from my friends at Beagle World, I think we have figured this one out. Thanks to this article posted, we know what the problem is, and if you have a Beagle, you better read this so you don't panic like I did. BEAGLE TAIL, COLD TAIL, LIMP TAILThe day after a bath or exercise in the cold rain you notice that your beagle is not holding his tail correctly. The first half seems fine but the top portion seems numb and limp. Your beagle acts like it is in pain and you fear the tail is broken. Probably not....the is a problem know as COLD TAIL, LIMP TAIL, RETRIEVER TAIL, OR BEAGLE TAIL. It is documented in many hunting breeds and in beagles. Usually with a few days rest the tail returns to normal and it may never occur again. One study by Janet E. Steiss, DVM, Ph.D., and J.C. Wright, DVM, Ph.D., researchers at Auburn University, noted that there was elevated muscle enzyme that is associated with muscle damage during an acute phase of this problem. While there is not evidence to pinpoint the exact cause of this problem, usually a few days of anti-inflammatory medication will shorten the duration of the problem. You can read about this problem in Andrew Brace's book--BEAGLES TODAY.
Prevention methods would include:
Here is a
link to an detailed article concerning this problem: Here's the article:
Cold Water Tail
"Cold water tail," "limber tail
syndrome," "broken tail," "dead tail,"
"broken wag" are all euphemisms for a relatively common
occurrence in sporting dogs. The tail of the dog hangs down from the tail
base or is held horizontal for three or four inches and then drops down. A
flaccid tail episode appears to be a painful, but relatively benign
affliction that can occur after swimming, after a heavy hunting day or
even after a bath with cold water or water that is too warm. It is not
always associated with swimming or water, but can happen after a heavy day
of work that involves a lot of tail action. The majority of limp tail
cases have been reported in sporting dogs or hounds -- Labrador
Retrievers, Golden Retrievers, Setters, Pointers, Flatcoats, Foxhounds and
Beagles are the breeds frequently named. Almost all dogs that suffer
through an occurrence return to normal within a few days. Affected dogs
may or may not have a repeat incidence during their lifetime. [It is this
author's experience that symptoms will repeat in the same animal and can
be trigged by something as simple as a cold water bath.] This affliction
has been described by the layman as a "sprain," fibrosis or a
"cold in the tail." The affected dog is miserable at the onset
and the tail is painful. If neither the dog owner nor the veterinarian is
familiar with this condition, it can be disturbing--fostering conjecture
on a possible fracture or spinal cord disease.Diane O. Gifford First Printed in the Labrador Retriever Club, Inc. Yearbook (1995). Updated January 2001 It was early in the training season and the pond seemed to have warmed enough for a water session. After working on a water blind handling pattern, the two year old black Labrador Retriever bitch was toweled and returned to her kennel in the car without any unusual occurrences. The next morning her owner noted that her tail was not carried in its normal manner--two thirds of her tail hung limply behind her. Upon examination of her hindquarters, the Labrador appeared in obvious distress and even yelped and whimpered when asked to sit. Fearing a "broken tail" or some other injury, a veterinarian was consulted and x-rays were taken; however, no firm diagnosis was determined. Four days later, without treatment, the bitch's tail carriage returned to normal. Males as well as females are affected as the following narrative from Ron Mandsager D.V.M., Nordic Pine Labradors, Stillwater, Oklahoma indicates. "My male Lab has experienced the condition on two occasions-both were a day or two after several days of heavy hunting (pheasant). On the first occasion, I was very concerned--the tail was carried limply and my dog was in obvious discomfort. Not knowing what was going on (this condition was never mentioned in Vet School, folks!) I was concerned about the possibility of either a fracture or nerve injury in the tail. We radiographed the caudal pelvic area, and the only thing we may have detected was swelling of the ventral muscles at the base of the tail. It resolved spontaneously after a day or two. After the second occurrence, and thinking a bit about what had transpired prior to the condition developing, my hunch is that in my dog it is a response to strenuous exercise of the tail muscles--more than they are used to. When my dog hunts pheasants and gets "birdy," the tail is up and beating rapidly. Between bouts of heavy activity, my dog is crated overnight or as we travel--this may aggravate the condition. This is just a hunch--no evidence. As a veterinarian, I had never seen or heard of this condition, nor had several colleagues with whom I discussed the condition with when I first encountered it." Janet E. Steiss, DVM, Ph.D., and J.C. Wright, DVM, Ph.D., researchers in the Sports Medicine Program at the College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, conducted a study on limber tail syndrome in hunting dogs. They surveyed sporting dog owners and trainers by mail and telephone as part of a project aimed at determining the cause or causes of this condition. Their initial inquiries were sent to 418 owners and trainers of hunting dogs in the Southeastern United States. Twenty-seven per cent replied--90% had owned or trained hunting dogs for more than 10 years and respondents had a total of 3,066 dogs in their kennels. Seventy-six per cent of the dogs were used for hunting. Half were in the field once a week and the other half more than once a week. The five breeds commonly observed to have been affected with the syndrome were the English Pointer, the English Setter, the Foxhound, the Beagle and the Labrador Retriever. Based on this study, it appears that the limp tail syndrome is associated with damage to the tail muscles. Dogs that were examined early in the course of the disease showed elevations in serum creatine phosphokinase, a muscle enzyme. There are similarities between this condition and "delayed onset muscle soreness" in humans. Underconditioning or overtraining has been implicated in many cases of dogs showing symptoms of limp tail syndrome. Without a direct cause for the condition, veterinarians find it difficult to prescribe treatment, however experienced owners and trainers feel that recovery time is shortened if anti-inflammatory drugs are administered as soon as the condition is observed. References: Grayson, Peggy, Water and the dead tail syndrome, Dog World, May 5, 1995 Grayson, Peggy, What causes dead tails?, Dog World, April 14, 1995 Roslin-Williams, M., A1I About the Labrador Retriever, Pelham Books, England, 1980 Sawtelle, Lucille, AII About the Golden Retriever, Pelham Books, England, 1980 Steiss, Janet E.DVM, Ph.D., Limber Tail Syndrome in Hunting Dogs, American Canine Sports Medicine Association Newsletter, September 1996, Volume 2, Issue 3. |
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