Day Four A.M. & P.M.

Holy Rabbit Hole — or should I say Rat Hole?

First, all is well here at Puppy Central.

WF D4 Daisy with Sage.jpg

Daisy continues to be an excellent mother. Puppies are kept clean and shiny, and all are gaining weight well.

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We feed Daisy as much as she wants to eat, including during the night shift, because making all that milk requires a lot of calories.

WF D4 Nursing Larkspur (1).jpg

Yesterday I posed the question about whether newborn puppies experience pain — that is the source of my Rat Hole comment above.

There is not a lot of research on newborn puppies — and after reading what they do to baby rats, I say THANK HEAVENS for that — but there is a surprising amount of research on newborn rats. This is, in part, because the rat baby research has implications for the care of preterm human infants.

Who knew?!

Rat pups are born in a similar state to canine puppies and so rat research is relevant to dogs. Further, if baby rat research informs knowledge/care of preterm infants, it is not a big leap to suggest what we know about preterm infants may also have some application to newborn puppies.

Mallow

Mallow

I do not need to rely on Google for my research — thanks heavens — but I like to know what people are reading when they search terms and questions. As I checked things out yesterday, I was reminded the internet may not be helping our critical thinking skills (Aysha says, “you think?!).

The heading in one post read, “Studies Reveal That Day-Old Puppies Do Feel Pain. To support this assertion, the author proceeded to mention ONE article by a veterinarian with no citation. I spent some time trying to track down the mentioned article — turns out it was 26-years-old!

Both the way-too-old-to-mean-anything article and the post that mentioned it had a definite bias, and this is another thing to watch for when trying to find answers. Even if you share the bias, it doesn’t help one get accurate answers — and shouldn’t accuracy be what we want?

Yes, I know facts get in the way of what we believe and/or want to be true, but they do seem rather important when one wants to make a good decision.

But I digress. Sort of.

Mariposa and Lupine

Mariposa and Lupine

Back to the rats and preterm babies.

Newborn rats respond in physiological ways to painful events and stress — and not good ways.

For example, Dührsen et al. (2012) studied the impact of painful events on newborn rats, and they concluded, “severe inflammatory pain and pain caused by repetitive injections in neonatal rats may cause major changes in the developing brain during the first week of life” (p. 35).

In humans, “exposure to repeated neonatal pain-related stress is associated with altered brain development, function, and neurodevelopmental outcome in children born preterm” (Vinall & Grunau, 2014, p. 586).

You can find ample literature supporting those conclusions. Basically, painful and/or stressful events in preterm babies and rat pups are a Bad Thing and can have long-lasting implications for neurological and physical development.

What about more gentle events — like early handling?

In one study of pretty benign (from my perspective) handling of rat pups, there were positive benefits seen in later tests of some skills BUT the researchers concluded this was: “…likely because of consequent boosts in maternal care which is certainly involved in the modulation of hippocampal function and HPA axis response, responsible for individual differences in stress reactivity and in cognitive performance…” (Plescia et al., 2014, p. 15).

In other words, they suspect it was the maternal behavior upon the return of the rat pup and not the brief separation (which was quite kind — nothing added to make it more aversive) that caused the benefits.

Huh.

Clarkia

Clarkia

Let’s talk dewclaws — those are typically removed in the first week of a puppy’s life and absolutely represent an aversive event.

ACK.

Front dewclaws are functional and there should be no question about those — they stay on my puppies.

But what about rears? The Breed Standard says they are to be removed.

Five of the Wildflowers had no rear dewclaws, two had just one rear dewclaw, and two puppies had both rear dewclaws. These were removed by our veterinarian with local anesthesia (buffered lidocaine — the buffering helps it not to sting so much) followed by quick access to Daisy for nursing.

Based on my research over the past day or so, I will explore a topical anesthesia and also add some kind of puppy pacifier during the procedure — sucking during painful procedures helps preterm babies and would be easy to do with puppies.

My take-aways…

  1. Newborn puppies should NOT be intentionally stressed or subjected to painful or aversive events; these have the potential to essentially change the hard-wiring of a puppy and not in beneficial ways.

  2. When newborn puppies are handled (in gentle ways — for example, weighing and cuddling), return to the mom in such a way to stimulate positive maternal behavior.

Why do some continue to insist newborn puppies are not impacted by pain? Perhaps for the same reason Carpenter (2020) suggested many continued to posit human baby boys did not feel pain during circumcision — because “…it was convenient” (p. 56).

Knowledge — so darn inconvenient.

Lupine

Lupine

Can Sage make his way to the milk bar? Watch THIS to find out.

Clover

Clover

Larkspur

Larkspur

Paintbrush and Lupine

Paintbrush and Lupine

Buttercup

Buttercup

Mallow

Mallow

Love

Love

Work Cited (and a few of the additional things I read to inform my thoughts)

Carpenter, L. (2020). If You Prick Us: Masculinity and Circumcision Pain in the United States and Canada, 1960–2000. Gender & History, 32(1), 54-69.

Dührsen, L., Simons, S., Dzietko, M., Genz, K., Bendix, I., Boos, V., . . . Felderhoff-Mueser, U. (2012). Effects of Repetitive Exposure to Pain and Morphine Treatment on the Neonatal Rat Brain. Neonatology, 103(1), 35-43.

Plescia, F., Marino, R., Navarra, M., Gambino, G., Brancato, A., Sardo, P., & Cannizzaro, C. (2014). Early handling effect on female rat spatial and non-spatial learning and memory. Behavioural Processes, 103, 9-16.

Roofthooft, D., Simons, S., Anand, K., Tibboel, D., & Van Dijk, M. (2014). Eight Years Later, Are We Still Hurting Newborn Infants? Neonatology, 105(3), 218-226.

Victoria, N., Karom, M., Eichenbaum, H., & Murphy, A. (2014). Neonatal injury rapidly alters markers of pain and stress in rat pups. Developmental Neurobiology, 74(1), 42-51.

Vinall, J. & Grunau, R,. (2014). Impact of repeated procedural pain-related stress in infants born very preterm. Pediatric Research, 75(5), 584-587.

Xu, W., Cong, X., Mcgrath, J., & Henderson, W. (2017). The Impact of Cumulative Pain/Stress on Neurodevelopment of Preterm Infants in the NICU. Nursing Research, 66(2), E26-E27.

Day One

The Wildflowers had a busy first full day here at Puppy Central.

They ate.

WF Day One nursing.jpg

…and ate some more…

WF Nursing Day One.jpg

They slept. A lot.

Buttercup on Mariposa

Buttercup on Mariposa

Mallow

Mallow

Clover (before her switch to a purple collar) and Larkspur

Clover (before her switch to a purple collar) and Larkspur

Lupine

Lupine

The puppies get handled a lot — how can anyone resist cuddling puppies?! In addition, they are weighed twice each day, and today they all got their first pedicure.

How do you cut a puppy’s nails, you wonder? Very carefully.

The nails all had sharp hooks — not a great photo but you can get the idea…

Clarkia pre-pedicure

Clarkia pre-pedicure

Since Daisy had to be shaved for her c-section, she does not have protective fur at the milk bar and those hooks are sharp!

Using regular human fingernail clippers, I carefully removed the sharp tips and then used an emery board to smooth the nails.

Clarkia post-pedicure

Clarkia post-pedicure

I only did the fronts — the rear nails are helpful for the puppies as they propel around the whelping box, and they do not impact Daisy.

I wanted to share something Lori sent to me…

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No breeder (who loves to sit and cuddle puppies all day) should be without that amazing floor chair. So much gratitude to Lori! It makes a BIG difference.

And check this out — Lupine is already getting on the furniture…

WF One day Lupine on chair.jpg

Daisy is doing well and deserves an award for her careful, thorough care of her babies.

WHEW — we made it through 24 hours.

The Wildflowers

The Deconstruction Stage has arrived — you know, the hindsight, questioning, and what if’s.

The first puppy arrived at 7:39 a.m. She was not in a sac and so the birth was “dry” — Daisy vocalized with the pain. We used gentle traction and gravity to say hello — and good-bye — to this wildflower taken before she had a chance to bloom.

We started the Zoom session — it looked like this in Boise…

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Those on Zoom watched as a boy arrived safely at 8:12 a.m. and another one at 8:36. When Daisy started pushing again, those two puppies headed for the warming basket.

Red is Paintbrush and orange is Mallow.

Red is Paintbrush and orange is Mallow.

But nothing happened — she pushed and pushed. We tried all the tricks — calcium, walking, nursing puppies, etc. to no avail. We reached out to the vet who gave Daisy 15 - 20 more minutes to produce a puppy or we had to head in.

Team Daisy kicked into gear, gathering up all the needed things in case Daisy could not deliver — literally — and so we were ready to go.

We had a 35 minute drive into Missoula. Suzanne drove and I was in the back with Daisy and the puppies. Daisy continued to push and when we were approaching Lolo I saw a head.

Suzanne was getting us to the parking lot of the tractor supply store as the puppy slithered out.

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To all appearances this was another angel puppy. Thank goodness we had the oxygen and Team Daisy is not easily dissuaded — we worked and worked and the puppy started to spark. When she squeaked, we knew that somehow — after well over an hour of being pushed — this little one had a chance.

Clarkie newborn.jpg

I had already checked in with Kris about my idea for her name and so that girl is Clarkia in honor of Clark Osojnicki — I think he would appreciate the story of her dramatic arrival.

We continued on to the vet and after checking remaining puppies with ultrasound, they gave us a space to finish whelping the litter.

Whelping at Pryun.jpg

I told Suzanne that for all future litters we will just call and say we have a stuck puppy so we can camp out there while whelping. I am kidding (sort of) but it was seriously awesome and especially after the last few scary days.

At 11:30 we welcomed another boy — his name is Sage.

Sage Newborn.jpg

At 12: 26 Mariposa arrived — a girl.

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At 1:45 another angel arrived — a boy — clearly having aspirated meconium.

Team Daisy had a confab.

Meconium prior to birth (which is yellow — not green) indicates puppy in distress. This had been a long labor with a lot of puppies — and more to go.

Clearly Daisy could likely deliver the rest of the litter naturally — but we had clear evidence we could well lose additional puppies.

Benefit vs. Burden — there it was again.

The benefit of a c-section is for the puppies and the owner’s peace of mind — the burden and risk is all on the mom.

I was unwilling to risk Daisy to reduce my anxiety about whelping. In my mind, human anxiety is actually not a good reason to risk a dog’s life — and yes, dogs die from c-sections.

Losing puppies is heartbreaking but it is a risk I will take over risking the mother, who had no choice in all this reproduction stuff, after all.

But there we were — an exhausted mother dog who clearly loved her puppies already and likely more puppies in distress — the balance shifted. Team Daisy elected a c-section for the remaining puppies.

As we sat in the room — in the very place where Zoey’s life ended — four new members of the family were arriving in the surgery suite.

Was the decision a correct one? Well, here’s our sign…

Larkspur — a boy.

Larkspur — a boy.

And so arrived Larkspur (boy)…

larkspur new born.jpg

And three more girls — Buttercup…

Buttercup newborn.jpg

Clover…

Clover newborn.jpg

And Lupine…

Lupine Newborn.jpg

And seriously — anyone who think breeding dogs well and with love is easy, a money maker, great for kids, etc. needs to get their head examined — and their heart, if they have one (which I doubt). Terror and tears — that is the reality of breeding dogs well.

But the Montana Wildflowers have started to bloom and they are a beautiful sight…

Daisy with one day pups.jpg

Collar colors correspond to the blooms of the wildflower for which each puppy is named.

Bright Pink: Clarkia (girl)

 Lavender: Lupine (girl)

 Teal: Sage (boy)

 White: Mariposa (girl)

 Yellow: Buttercup (girl)

 Orange: Mallow (boy)

 Red: Paintbrush (boy)

Purple (changed from green due to easy confusion with teal): Clover (girl)

 Bright Blue: Larkspur (boy)

Their new families may, of course, change their call names but while they are with us — those are their names.

Three pups at one day.jpg

Daisy is being an outstanding mother.

Daisy with one day puppies.jpg

Should we have done the c-section sooner?

That would have risked Daisy’s life without the potential benefits time identified, risked her maternal instincts since even a bit early can impair maternal behavior, and we have three smaller puppies who would not have benefited from arriving earlier.

So no — I am sorrowful for the angel puppies but do not regret staring terror in the face and marching into it. The blooming happened as it should — such is the nature of Nature.

Daisy and newborn Sage (1).jpg

SO much gratitude to Suzanne, Dear Husband, our incredible veterinarian, and every one of you who sent their best wishes and good thoughts — and who together created community around these wonderful new lives.

Thank you is inadequate.