Russian rescue dog Monica gets new life after prosthetics operation – World Latest News Headlines

The operation was performed by the veterinarian Sergei Gorshkov, who is located in the city novosibirsk and has implanted prostheses in 37 animals since 2015 – although Monica is the first dog to benefit from her work.

Two weeks after her operation, the pooch is adjusting well to her new mobility – and Gorshkov says she will soon be living a normal life, though he was “surprised” by the speed of her recovery.

“I don’t think we were optimistic about it,” he told CNN. “But on the third day she got up and walked around the clinic, going from room to room.”

However, getting Monica into the operation room was not easy – she was initially found without her claws by workers in the village of Plastunovskaya in December 2020, and volunteers rescued the suspect who had abused her.

Monica was brought into the care of animal rescue volunteers Marina Gapich and Alla Leonkina based in the southern Russian city of Krasnodar, where she amputated her damaged limbs and received a blood transfusion.

Gapich told CNN that he and Leonkina had “sleepless nights” on Monica, and disagreed with veterinary advice that she be euthanized. Both women contacted Gorshkov and raised 400,000 Russian rubles (over $5,400) for the operation.

Monica’s prosthetics then had to be printed by a 3D printer in the city of Troitsk, not far from Moscow and then biocoated at Tomsk Polytechnic University before the procedure was carried out by Gorshkov.

For the vet, much of his work during the past 18 months has taken on a new importance, with “epidemic pet” being particularly important to some.

Gorshkov said, “I am especially happy to give new life to animals in the Kovid period.” “People find some solace in animals and that’s why I treat people by treating animals.”

And Monica has already made a place in the hearts of the volunteers who saved her. When asked if Poch would stay in Novosibirsk, Gapich’s answer was not certain.

“We are his caretakers, we are responsible for him!” She told CNN that she and Leonkina had been in touch with a London animal behaviorist who could now be consulted on Monica’s case.

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