Nearly game, set and match for the dog called Trickster that ate two tennis balls
A rescue dog from Bosnia has undergone a challenging procedure at a Cambridgeshire animal hospital to remove a tennis ball she had eaten – and it wasn’t her first.
Three-year-old Trickster, a mix breed who now lives with her owners Alice Toby-Brant and Chris Toby in Longstanton, was treated at DWR Veterinary Specialists in Six Mile Bottom after she ate the discarded ball while out on a walk.
Trickster has always had a penchant for chewing small balls, but thankfully doesn’t always swallow them. It is possible that the steroids she is on for an autoimmune disease makes her feel hungry.
The first time Trickster swallowed a tennis ball she was taken to an emergency vet, who gave her medication to make her sick in the hope she could bring it back up. When this didn’t work, she was referred to DWR, where an endoscopy procedure was performed to retrieve it.
This involved passing a telescopic camera down her food pipe (oesophagus) and into her stomach where the tennis ball, which was split open down the middle, could be grasped and removed via her mouth.
When Trickster swallowed a tennis ball a second time, it was not possible to remove it in the same way because it remained in one piece and could not be easily grasped as it sat in the stomach. Instead, Trickster needed to have an operation by the specialist surgeons at Linnaeus-owned DWR.
The surgeons had to open Trickster’s abdomen and then manipulate the stomach to push the ball into the teeth of the forceps to allow it to be retrieved. This procedure avoided surgically opening the stomach lining itself, leading to a quicker recovery.
Alice said she had spent many hours training Trickster to stop chewing tennis balls since she came to live with her as a six-month-old puppy.
Alice said: “When she was younger, we noticed that Trickster would take tennis balls, run away and hide with them, so we started training her to drop them. Nearly all the times that Trickster picks up a ball, she will drop it – but on two occasions, she’s thought ‘I’m not going to drop it, I’m going to keep it’.
“We cannot confirm it’s due to the medication that she’s on, and she’s now on a very low dose, with the hope she will be able to come off it altogether, as she’s not had any relapses for a couple of years.
“However, since the operation, we’ve kept a muzzle on while she’s off the lead.”
Simon Tappin, clinical director at DWR Veterinary Specialists, said: “We know Trickster very well, as our neurology team treat her autoimmune disease. The second occasion we removed a tennis ball was by a rarely-performed procedure and was a complete success.
“We’re pleased to hear that Trickster has not swallowed any more tennis balls since then.”