The Doctor Will See Your Iguana Now
Dr. Anthony Pilny started the day short-handed: A colleague
at the Center for Avian and Exotic Medicine was bitten by an iguana while
making her morning rounds.
An iguana’s mouth contains around 100 tiny serrated teeth.
The other vet went off to the urgent care clinic to get stitches, leaving Dr.
Pilny to do an enormously messy piece of gynecological surgery on a duck
without an assisting doctor.
The duck was out cold on the table in a basement operating
room, a breathing tube stuck down her bill. Dr. Pilny sliced open her abdominal
cavity and rooted around.
“What is this?” he asked. “I’m seeing some sort of
fluid-filled saclike structures. I see free egg yolk in her body.”
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There was little time to ponder the situation. On this
Thursday morning not long ago, patients were stacked up in their cages: a
guinea pig with hair loss, a rabbit unable to move its bowels, and the
irascible iguana, now relaxing behind a sign that said “Use Caution Lunges.”
Others waited in recovery: a hedgehog newly minus one eyeball, and a chinchilla
who sacrificed a leg to the bars of her cage.
The center, on Columbus Avenue on the Upper West Side of
Manhattan, is the city’s only exclusively exotic animal hospital. “Exotic” in
the veterinary trade simply means all pets except cats and dogs. The center
treats anything else that comes in the door and weighs under 50 pounds. Most of
the patients are rabbits, rodents, lizards or birds, but they can get pretty
exotic: kinkajous, alligators, flower horn fish and prairie dogs. So can their
problems.
“I’ve been an avian and exotic vet since 2004,” Dr. Pilny
said, “and every day I say, ‘What the hell is this?’”
Many of the center’s patients are not legal in New York
City, sometimes for good reason. “I’m not a big fan of people keeping a lot of
the animals that come in here,” Dr. Pilny said.
But the center asks no questions and passes no judgments. It
is not the pet police.
“We don’t report anybody,” Dr. Pilny said. “We just provide
medical care.”
Dino, the 3-year-old white duck on the operating table, was
a longtime patient. In 2015, she lost her ability to form eggshells, and unlaid
eggs built up inside her. Dr. Pilny removed most of her reproductive hardware
but left her ovary because taking it out could make her bleed to death.
“Most birds when you take out the reproductive tract, they
stop ovulating,” Dr. Pilny said. “This duck decided to break the rules.”
Dino has other health issues. Her egg problems led to
calcium deficiency, weak bones and a fractured leg. She could no longer walk.
“She can crawl around on towels, but otherwise we have to
carry her everywhere,” said her owner, E. J. Orbe, a ballroom dance instructor
from Paterson, N.J.
Some people might hesitate to invest $1,200 in gynecological
surgery on a lame duck. But Dino has a job: She’s a seeing-eye duck for another
of Mr. Orbe’s ducks, Penguin, who is blind. “She finds food and water and makes
noises, and Penguin would come over and start eating,” Mr. Orbe said.
Inside Dino, Dr. Pilny was hacking his way through a sea of
yolky blobs. “It’s just a very extensive, severe amount of schmutz in here,” he
said to the veterinary technician, Kristine Castillo. A clamp on Dino’s webbed
foot fed her vital signs to a monitor. Her heartbeat pounded through the cheap
speaker like a tom-tom drum: thwap-thwap, thwap-thwap.
Dr. Pilny explained as he cut: After Dino’s earlier surgery,
the yolks she produced fell loose inside her body and formed cysts that
attached themselves to various organs. There were hundreds. He removed some of
them and drained others that were too stuck.
“Now comes the part where I try to do something risky and
just hope it’s right,” he said. He tied off the blood supply to the oviduct.
“Please, duck,” he said.
A cyst burst at the touch of his blade and sprayed yellow
fluid toward his face. He did not flinch. The technician called for more gauze
pads.
“Everything just bleeds and bleeds and bleeds!” Dr. Pilny
said.
The surgery ground into its second hour. The hospital’s
practice manager, Lorelei Tibbetts, poked her head into the small, beeping,
thumping operating room. It was about Snorri, the constipated white rabbit.
“He’s looking at me miserably, like he has a balloon in his belly,” she said.
“Should we try laser?”
Dr. Pilny told her to hang on. A blood vessel burst. “That
wasn’t good,” he said. He cut and sewed, cut and sewed. The bleeding stopped.
Dr. Pilny decided he had done all he could for one day.
Ms. Tibbetts came around again. “You closing?” she asked.
“Yeah,” Dr. Pilny said.
“Are you happy?”
“Am I ever happy?”
“So, no.”
Dr. Pilny, 44, is one of three veterinarians at the center.
He has a tattoo of a crane on one arm, a finch on the other, and a puffin on
the back of his leg. He wears a tropical-theme surgical cap with parrots and
green leaves on it. He is particularly fond of birds; he has 15 of them. He
saves brightly colored feathers from his patients in a desk drawer in the
hospital office and periodically sends them to an organization called Feathers
for Native Americans. They are for American Indians who require naturally
molted plumage for their headdresses.
Dr. Pilny grew up in the Bronx, went to veterinary school at
the University of Florida and specialized in exotics because he likes to see
the insides of different kinds of animals and enjoys a challenge. But medicine
is medicine.
“Sometimes you look heroic and you save the animal’s life
and the little girl is happy,” he said. Sometimes the patient dies. Mostly, the
results fall somewhere in between.
The center opened 12 years ago, spun off from Animal
General, a hospital two doors down. Though the city’s biggest pet hospital, the
Animal Medical Center on the Upper East Side, treats plenty of exotics, Animal
General’s owners thought there was a place for a stand-alone practice where
predator-prey interaction was kept to a minimum.
“One of the ideas is that cats and birds don’t mix,” said
Karen Heidgerd, the Center for Avian and Exotic Medicine’s administrator.
The cheery vibe in the reception area would not be possible
in the presence of cats and dogs. Bright-beak finches flit in the window. The
center’s resident rabbits nibble sprigs of hay in an alcove by the front desk.
The center sees about 10 patients on a typical day. While
there are no statistics on ownership of exotic pets in New York (especially
illegal ones), Ms. Tibbetts said that more owners seemed to be seeking medical
care.
“In the past, they were just considered ‘caged pets’ and
most people didn’t even consider taking them to the vet,” she said. Most owners
do not carry insurance, though it is available, Dr. Pilny said.
Dr. Pilny’s next surgery was an ovariohysterectomy on a
guinea pig. Her owners had brought her in because she was losing fur on her
flanks. Dr. Pilny noticed that the fur loss was identical on both sides.
Symmetrical alopecia is caused by a hormonal imbalance, which was probably in
turn caused by ovarian cysts. Cut, snip, slice, sew, done. Fifteen minutes.
Ms. Tibbetts poked her head in again. “What did you find?”
she asked.
“Nothing too exciting,” Dr. Pilny said. “A little cyst on
the left ovary, a little inflammation.” He admired his handiwork.
“The thing that matters most to the owners is how they look
when they pick them up from surgery,” Dr. Pilny said. “No matter how lifesaving
or complicated the surgery, what matters is when they pick the pet up and say,
‘Look at that incision.’”
Dr. Pilny ate lunch at his desk. He called the duck’s owner
and told him the surgery had gone reasonably well.
“Maybe it buys her a good eight months or a year or
something,” he told Mr. Orbe. “I don’t necessarily think she’s cured, but I
think this helped a lot.”
After lunch, things got weird.
A rabbit was brought in for a dental issue, but during the
exam, its eyes began jerking back and forth, a condition called nystagmus. Then
it started running around in circles on the treatment table. “I told the owner
it’s either a bizarre coincidence, or this is the real problem,” Dr. Pilny
said. The rabbit was tested and treated for a protozoan infection.
Meanwhile, the owners of Snorri the constipated rabbit came
to visit him. While they were holding him, Snorri became agitated, moved his
bowels violently and collapsed. Dr. Pilny could not revive him.
Snorri’s owners sobbed loudly behind a closed door, but the
staff was a little shaken, too. Snorri had been born at the center six months
ago. His parents were the pair of bunnies munching hay in the reception area.
“It’s a young rabbit,” Dr. Pilny said. “It shouldn’t happen.”
By now, Dr. Pilny had a headache. The veterinary technician
brought out the iguana. Her name was Spot. She was 9 and had a history of
lesions and fungal infection. Her tail was amputated a while ago. Now she had a
crusty lesion on the top of her head that needed to be biopsied.
The technician held Spot, tightly wrapped in a towel. Dr.
Pilny gave her a shot of lidocaine. He took the tissue sample and then stuck a
hemostat in the hole in her head to feel around. He expected to hit bone. He
did not. “It feels like I’m passing it through beach sand,” he said.
Dr. Pilny prospected a bit inside Spot’s skull. Soon he had
reached her sinus. Some blood came out of her nose. “I could dig around in here
all day,” Dr. Pilny said.
The grim jokes began to flow, like something out of
“M*A*S*H” crossed with “All Creatures Great and Small.”
“Did she just blow air out of that hole?” Dr. Pilny asked.
“Did I make a blowhole and turn it into a whale? I did — I turned an iguana
into a whale.”
Ms. Tibbetts came over to inspect. “This whole thing — it
has no tail!” she said. “We had to chop its whole tail off. It’s like rotting
from the inside, and we can’t stop it.”
“That’s like what the clients say: ‘Is it rotting from the
inside out?’” Dr. Pilny said.
“It is!” Ms. Tibbetts said. “This one the answer is yes.”
Dr. Pilny wrapped Spot’s toothy mouth shut with four layers
of tape and took her off for an X-ray. It showed a large gap in the nasal bone.
The sinus was filled with pus and exudates. The cause turned out to be a bone
infection that required surgery and long-term treatment.
Spot’s place on the prep-room table was quickly taken by the
body of Snorri. Dr. Pilny had recommended a necropsy because the owners had two
other rabbits.
Snorri’s large intestine looked like an overinflated tire
tube. Dr. Pilny explained that it had stopped moving food along, and the food
had fermented and filled the intestine with gas.
“He got so severely bloated that the intestines leaked
bacteria into the abdomen and he went into sepsis,” Dr. Pilny said. A
technician lit an odor-eliminating candle and laid it by Snorri’s head.
Why Snorri’s intestines stopped working was a mystery. Dr.
Pilny took tissue samples to send to the lab. A custodian made a clay heart
with Snorri’s paw prints on it to give to his owners.
Dr. Pilny went up to the office to make more calls. Ms.
Tibbetts and the vet who was bitten by Spot, Dr. Jessica Grodio, were there
discussing iguana temperaments.
“I always expect an iguana is going to bite,” Ms. Tibbetts
said, tossing in an expletive. “I always assume the worst with them.”
“Well, now I will, too,” Dr. Grodio said, examining her
bandaged finger. “I guess it’s been all nice iguanas so far.”
“There’s no such thing as a nice iguana,” Ms. Tibbetts said.
“Remember when Ty bit a hole in his owner’s face?”
“I don’t remember that,” Dr. Pilny said.
“What are you — he had like 50 sutures in the shape of an
iguana mouth on his cheek,” Ms. Tibbetts said. “He still has scars.”
Dr. Pilny dialed the phone. “Hey there, it’s Dr. Pilny about
Spot,” he said. “So, the plot thickens. …”
The day wound down. People came to pick up their pets. A
tech brought up Elphaba the hedgehog, whose eye had to be removed after it
became infected.
“Hi, beautiful,” said her owner, Daniel Rodriguez. Elphaba
wiggled her snout and sniffed enthusiastically. “Definitely better than
yesterday,” he said.
Then Spot’s owner, Chris St. John, came to get her. Mr. St.
John, an illustrator who lives in Hell’s Kitchen, conceded that she could be a
handful.
“She’s a tough one, and she can have a little bit of
attitude too,” he said. “She can be a diva.” Still, he said, he loved her very
much.
Ms. Tibbetts brought up a taped-shut cardboard box and set
it on the table. She showed the X-ray to Mr. St. John, pointing out the missing
chunk of bone: “And these are her teeth, which found their way into Dr.
Grodio’s finger today.”
“Oh, I’m sorry,” Mr. St. John said.
“It’s all right,” Ms. Tibbetts said with a laugh.
Mr. St. John unboxed his iguana.
“Baby,” he said softly as she extended her long green legs.
He caressed her dewlap.
“Hey cutie patoots!” Ms. Tibbetts said brightly. Ms.
Tibbetts told Mr. St. John to get Spot eating again. “I’m worried about her
weight loss.”
“I’ll do it,” Mr. St. John said. “She’s been through a ——”
his voice faltered.
“Been through a lot,” Ms. Tibbetts said.
Mr. St. John kissed Spot’s spiny back.
“O.K., girl,” he said, “you’re heading home.”
The Post First Appeared On NyTimes
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