NikiBA
Member
- Feb 24, 2021
- 32
- 6
- Parrots
- (Deceased) Lima (black capped caique), Tambo (scarlet macaw), Ringo (red fronted macaw), Richard (eclectus), (deceased) Carina (b&g macaw), Ebony (African Grey), Zeke (red lored zon)
Last Friday, we lost our beloved little Lima as she underwent an ultrasound at a university veterinary school clinic. My devastation is beyond words; I havenât felt like this since my grandmothers passed when I was in college, 20 years ago. My husband and I do not have (human) kids, and I had no idea the depth of my connection with Lima until I felt her loss looming. To make a long story short, she had a ballooning respiratory issue that our local vet couldnât treat because he doesnât have the technology. He believed it was originating in her crop, which wasnât retracting (it was like a little open sac). He referred us to the university for a CT scan. Over the course of about 10 days, Limaâs nares shrunk until they were smaller than a budgieâs, and she would sneeze liquid, sometimes plugging the nare completely. I had her on a nebulizer until we got to the university, a 4.5 hour drive from our home. I was terrified. To cut the story again, I did not have a good sense of trust in the intern we were assigned to. She was frequently confused (confusing my name with Limaâs among many other changes and little lapses) during the 36 hours or so that I worked with her. She seemed more tuned into her âplanâ than on listening to what was going on. Lima stayed over at the clinic and I had a hotel. The staff overall seemed to be taking good care of her but when they brought her out to visit, she leapt towards me and was clearly wanting to be with meâŚ.scared and alone in the clinic. I had been warned about the dangers of using anesthesia on a parrot. When the time came for her procedure, she was sedated. The intern called me about 10 minutes into it saying they werenât able to empty her crop during sedation, and did I want to proceed with the anesthesia for the ultrasound? I said yes. With every fiber of my being I wish I would have said no, and pulled my little one out of there at that moment. Five minutes later I got a call that Lima wasnât responding well to the anesthetic, and did they have permission to start CPR? Yes of course. I ran into the clinic and begged for someone to let me back there, I knew she needed to hear my voice. The kind helper at the front door did her very best to help me, taking me into the back hallways and searching. I got another call in five minutes that the CPR wasnât working, the head of the department was in the room and did I want to continue for 5 more minutes, the last option? Of course I said yes. At that point I was pacing at the entryway to the maze of rooms and hallways. I saw the department head running down a hall AFTER I got that call. Probably less than two minutes later I got a call that Lima had passed. I am beyond gone at that point.
I am here in the forums because I need to process this. I am angry with myself for leaving her there after I began to feel discomfort, leaving her in fear in a cold environment with people she did not know. I am angry I didnât slow down the process. I am furious at the intern and facility overall, whether justified or not. Was it more or less dangerous to use the anesthetic when her crop was full? Was it my responsibility to ask that question at the moment? On the phone, the internâs main concern was that it would cloud the results. Did I do the right or wrong thing? Most of all, my heart is broken and the void I feel is immense. I know Lima is in a good place. We thought we would have her in our lives for many more years. It is a different sadness than when someone dies naturally from age; I feel I somehow had a hand in this, and I am tormented.
I am here in the forums because I need to process this. I am angry with myself for leaving her there after I began to feel discomfort, leaving her in fear in a cold environment with people she did not know. I am angry I didnât slow down the process. I am furious at the intern and facility overall, whether justified or not. Was it more or less dangerous to use the anesthetic when her crop was full? Was it my responsibility to ask that question at the moment? On the phone, the internâs main concern was that it would cloud the results. Did I do the right or wrong thing? Most of all, my heart is broken and the void I feel is immense. I know Lima is in a good place. We thought we would have her in our lives for many more years. It is a different sadness than when someone dies naturally from age; I feel I somehow had a hand in this, and I am tormented.