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Rehab isn’t just for humans

Rehab isn’t just for humans
WSU Delivers

Rehab isn’t just for humans

WSU Veterinary Teaching Hospital offers continuum of care for animal patients.

Small black dog with large ears wearing protective tinted goggles while a vet passes a wand instrument over her.

Blueberry, a rescue chihuahua, and her sister Emma Rose, a golden retriever, got along just fine. Until they didn’t.

Out of the blue, Emma Rose went after Blueberry, leaving the small dog paralyzed. An emergency veterinarian told owner Kim Ferraro, “it’s really bad.”

At the vet’s suggestion, Ferraro took Blueberry to the Washington State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital where she underwent successful surgery. As is often the case with human medical care, though, the surgery was just the beginning of Blueberry’s recovery. And the WSU veterinary hospital is part of that journey, too.

Small black dog wearing a flotation harness learning to use an underwater treadmill while a seated person helps them move their feet.

The little dog is undergoing rehabilitation in the hospital’s Integrative Medicine department. Therapies offered there include an underwater treadmill, massage and pain management, as well as complementary treatments like acupuncture and Chinese herbal therapies.

Integrative medicine is a growing field in veterinary care, said Jessica Bunch, a veterinarian and associate professor at the WSU College of Veterinary Medicine.  

“If you get a knee replacement, you’re going to have physical therapy. That’s the norm,” she said. “Why wouldn’t we want to offer the same thing to our animals?”

The menu of treatments offered at WSU’s Integrative Medicine clinic will sound familiar to anyone who’s been in physical therapy. Hands-on techniques like stretching and moving joints, electrical stimulation for pain and muscle function, and home exercises. The patients’ conditions are human-like, too: post-surgical rehab, pain management, arthritis, and soft-tissue injuries among athletes.

For little Blueberry, the first goal was managing her pain, Bunch said. Next came exercises to keep her muscles flexible as she heals. Then, hopefully, she’ll make enough progress to learn to walk again.

“We don’t know how far we’re going to get, but we’re going to hope and think that hey, we’re going to get back to a point where she can be functional,” Bunch said.

Of course I was going to bring Blueberry to Washington State University, the best in the nation to take care of her.

Kim Ferraro
Two people help a small black dog balance on its stomach on a therapy balloon.

Ferraro said the team at the WSU Veterinary Teaching Hospital has been realistic with her about Blueberry’s recovery, but also encouraging and upbeat.

She added that she doesn’t blame Emma Rose for Blueberry’s injury, and is simply keeping the dogs apart now.

“Blueberry is the sweetest animal I’ve ever owned,” Ferraro said. “And of course I was going to bring Blueberry to Washington State University, the best in the nation to take care of her.”

Explore WSU News to learn more about how WSU’s impact goes beyond the numbers.

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