Dog Traumatized | (PTSI) PTSD Treatment for Dogs that Might be Put Down for Uncontrollable Behavior
Dr. Eugene Lipov Dr. Eugene Lipov
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 Published On May 15, 2023

A service dog, named Reno, was a companion for an Iraq War veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress. After being pinned under a crashed van, and burned during the accident, Reno developed his own PTSD.

“He displayed a lot of anxiety," says owner Sonia Campos-Marchiori, who with her husband, Paul Marchiori, founded the V.E.T. Service Dogs (https://vetservicedogsnfp.org/home) charity that trained Reno and other service dogs. "He was tearing couches up and pulling curtains down."
Suddenly a liability instead of an asset to his veteran in Pennsylvania, Reno returned to the charity in Lyons at the start of this year and the veteran got another service dog.

Reno barks loudly, growls and snarls as he's led into a veterinary clinic in Buffalo Grove.

“But he's very gentle. He never bites,” Campos-Marchiori says a moment before Reno nips at the sleeve of veterinarian anesthesiologist Jusmeen Sarkar, who has the dog outfitted with a harness and safety cone. That sudden change in behavior is why the couple is bringing their 2.5 year-old German shepherd to undergo a PTSD treatment called a stellate ganglion block that...had been used only on humans.

“It's never been done before. Maybe we're starting a new trend. It could make a difference in a lot of dogs," says Dr. Eugene Lipov...”

It takes more than an hour for sedatives to calm Reno so that the staff can stick a breathing tube down his throat, place him on his back on an operating table and tape him down to keep him in place. Injecting a dye and using X- rays to ensure his needle in the dog's neck next to the spine is in the correct location, Lipov injects an anesthetic often given to women during childbirth. By numbing the stellate ganglion, a collection of nerves found at the level of the sixth and seventh cervical vertebrae, Lipov says he can directly target the nerves that regulate the body's "fight-or-flight" response to perceived threats, limiting the feelings of panic and anxiety.

Lipov claims the procedure has an 87 percent success rate in humans and says the shots can last for a few months or several years, with a second injection used in some cases. But will that work the same for a dog?

“Mammals are mammals,” says Lipov, the procedure basics would remain the same whether he was injecting a human, a dog or a giraffe, which all have seven vertebrae in their necks.

The actual injection takes only a few minutes. As the anesthesia wears off and Reno opens his eyes, Lipov says he's confident his injection hit the right spot because the pupil of the dog's left eye is bigger than the pupil in his right eye. Reno doesn't growl or bark on his way out of the center, but the true test will come the first time he is at home and "hears a rabbit three houses away," quips Paul Marchiori, a retired machinist and village trustee in Lyons.

“He was barking at the garbage truck this morning, but our other dogs were, too. That's normal," Sonia Marchiori says Thursday. "But there's definitely a peaceful look on his face, a more relaxed look."

After a visit Thursday to the dog park, where puppies, other dogs and nearby traffic used to bother Reno, Sonia Campos-Marchiori says Reno still sprints after balls, but he is a changed dog.

“I want to cry," she says, declaring the procedure a success. "Usually if one of the other dogs acts up, Reno would get amped up. But he's relaxed."

The treatment gives new hope for dogs that might otherwise be put down for uncontrollable behavior, says Lipov... "I think that's amazing and wonderful," Lipov says after hearing about Reno's new attitude. "We can potentially save the lives of many dogs. This proves once again that PTSD is real and that PTSD is treatable. That's the big take-away here."

Words excerpted from a story by Burt Constable, originally published in the Daily Herald. Video footage also from ‪@DailyHeraldClips‬

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Dr. Eugene Lipov is a board-certified physician in anesthesiology and pain, and one of the world’s leading experts on the physical consequences of post-traumatic stress — truly, pioneer in stellate ganglion treatment for symptoms of PTSD. In his new book, The Invisible Machine (released April 2023), Dr. Lipov shares a new understanding of trauma — and a treatment to reverse the symptoms that could have profound implications for medicine, mental health and society at large, previously unknown to most people.

LEARN MORE: https://dreugenelipov.com/

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