tattoo wrote:from what I got this morning after seeing Jenn she said the vet did take the blood from the jugular but nicked the air sack and he thinks it got filled with blood and she went into cardiac arrest. they did cpr for 10 minutes but could not bring her back.
question: should he of warned her that this was a risk? was she to young for this? should the vet be responsible for this?
I know she just finished paying for her last week and even paid her off quicker because she felt bad that the bird was alone in a cage at the breeders. It is a big hardship on her in many ways, and money is not easy because we had to take hours away from people in these hard times. The vet didn't charge her for the visit..is that enough? should the vet help with money towards the bird. It is obviously their fault. She would not have done the test if 1)she had known it was a risk, and 2) she had another bird with the liver disease.
she will read this so please advise her.
That makes me feel a bit better, I was horrified at the thought of someone taking blood direct from the heart.
Unfortunately there are always risks associated with jugular venepuncture. It is unusual to loose a bird this way and it is not common. The vet is not at fault (from what I can tell, obviously I wasn't there so don't know if the bird was handled incorrectly, how experienced the vet is etc), it is just one of those unfortunate fluke things that happened. As long as all procedures were done according to proper blood sampling standard than blame can't really be put on anyone. The vet is probably feeling absolutely horrible as well. If the clinic is calling itself an exotics clinic it makes me believe that they have at least one vet there who is experienced with these types of animals.
If the bird struggled too much during the procedure the needle might have made a bigger hole in the vein which caused the bleed. Nicking the air sac should not have been a problem, the cervicocephalic air sac is in that region and almost invariable gets nicked with venepuncture from the jugular. It sounds to me like the bird bled out from a hole in the jugular vein. Sometimes they bleed under the skin if the hole in the vein isn't closed properly and you don't notice until its too late. Its a hard one! A horrible horrible fluke accident. The vet is not obligated to pay anything towards the bird. They have done enough by not charging for the consult and their time. As long as nothing was done negligently (and it doesn't sound like it was) then there is probably nothing the vet could have done to avoid the situation.
Hopefully this incident doesn't deter anyone from getting health checks for their birds, especially new bird checks (I gave a spiel in the "Should we take our birds to the Vet" topic - or the topic was something along those lines).