Dog Wrist Brace with Paw – Specialized Pet Solutions – $745

$745.00

This wrist brace for dogs is built to accommodate your pup’s injury and help them heal. Carpal (wrist) hyperextension happens when excessive force is applied to the carpus, leading to a collapse of the carpal joint. Typically this is seen after an animal has fallen from a significant height or similar trauma. Older dogs may show signs of hyperextension due to the degeneration of ligaments, and puppies may experience this as a result of their development.

Wrist or carpal braces for dogs are used:

  • To address hyperextension and provide support while the injury heals
  • To accommodate and support various angular deformities
  • To manage the healing of fractures
  • Helps prevent knuckling

Please be understanding and nurturing while your pet acclimates to this new tool. All animals treat braces differently and adjust accordingly.

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Description

Dogs can be born with hyperextension or trauma can cause hyperextension. Our wrist brace with paw section can help stabilize the joint allowing for healing and recovery of the area.  Our wrist brace with paw section can also help stabilize the leg as a result of a brachial plexus injury that leads to paralysis of the leg.  This brace will allow your dog to use their paralyzed leg as it provides strength and support to the leg and paw.   Our dog brace can also be used pre and post surgery to help with healing and stabilization.  Our dog wrist brace also known as a carpal brace is custom made from a cast taken of your pets affected limb.  We use the highest orthotic materials to create a high quality carpal brace for your pet.

Once you order your dog wrist brace Specialized Pet Solutions will mail out a casting kit.  Once you receive this casting kit watch the video on our Youtube channel or in the link on the product page of our website on how to cast an animal.  It is helpful to watch the video prior to casting as it allows you a visual of the process and will aid in gathering the necessary materials needed to do the cast.  If you are uncertain about doing the casting yourself, your veterinarian can also do it for you (their fee’s will apply).  Once the cast is complete ship it back to us and we will create a mold of your animals limb.  With the mold we create your custom device.  Please allow 3-5 business days for manufacturing.  We will then mail your custom brace to you.

Please be understanding and nurturing while your pet acclimates to this new tool. All animals treat braces differently and adjust accordingly.

Every brace is made out of high quality materials and manufactured to the highest standards right here in the United States.  We have successfully fit dogs, horses, sheep, donkeys, llamas, cows, and goats with orthotics and are open to discussing any unique cases you may have.

Animal wellness is our top priority and we offer a 5% discount to any animal shelter or sanctuary.  Our prices start at $695, price is determined by size and difficulty.  Please call for further information on how we can help your animal today 509-934-0067

 

***The customer is responsible for informing SPS in a timely fashion for any adjustment that are needed, or any device defects or other issues.  Customer must contact SPS within 30 days of receipt of device to let us know of any issues.  We will make adjustments within the first 6 months to ensure proper fit, however we cannot guarantee animal acceptance. As this is a custom one of a kind device specific to your pet there are no refunds.

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Beauty the Bald Eagle: A poacher shot Beauty, tragically maiming her beak so that she couldn’t eat by herself anymore and was dependent on hand-feeding for survival. After three years a group of volunteers made her a prosthetic beak, which allowed her to grasp food herself and eat properly again. 

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Riley the Mare: Infections like the one Riley had, thanks to a contaminated metal plate that was placed in her limb, are so common that it seems to be a given that the horse will just have to be put down. But this quarter horse’s survival of the infection and the use of a prosthetic limb are showing people that this doesn’t have to be the case. Riley’s survival is truly an inspiration to many.

cat

Oscar the Cat: Oscar the cat’s hind legs were severed by a combine harvester while he snoozed in a maize field near his home in Jersey off the mainland of the United Kingdom. A passing cyclist found him and brought him back to his owners; at the time they said he was so covered in blood there was no way they thought he would make it. They got him to an animal hospital known for its pioneering work on the mainland of the UK, and Oscar was given then-unheard-of surgery and fitted with implanted prosthetics. He has been through a few surgeries to ensure the prosthetics are functioning properly and is known as Oscar the Bionic Cat.

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These stories are becoming legion, with more and more extraordinary tales of survival and improved quality of life across a larger and larger variety of species all the time. One of the most important considerations, though, must be whether or not a prosthetic will help with improving the animal’s quality of life.

Animal Prostheses and Quality of Life

It’s easy to think that we know what is best for our pet, but it’s important to pay attention to the very real concerns about what a prosthetic will help them gain...and what it will not. A prosthetic isn’t the same as an original limb, no matter how hard we all want it to be. And it’s important to consider your pet’s happiness, possibly in contrast to your own. Your happiness at the thought of your pet successfully using a prosthetic may not be the same as your pet’s, and it’s important that you are able to differentiate between the two.

There are three major considerations to make if you are considering a prosthetic for your pet:

 

  1. Challenges for your pet: Device suspension, device rotation, and occasionally friction pressure sores are all considerations to make in terms of whether or not a prosthetic will do greater harm than good for your pet, by yourself, your vet, and your prosthetist.
  2. Is your pet a good candidate? Certain requirements exist that must be met to make sure that your pet will be comfortable and adapt well to a new limb. 
  3. Make sure you and your vet’s goals are the same: Prosthetics can be made to meet so many goals it is important to ensure you’re on the same page in terms of mobility, type of support, stress, and movement, and other issues that will arise as your pet begins to use their prosthetic. 

 

As always, it is imperative to include your prosthetist in many of these conversations to ensure everyone is on the same page. 

Where Does Specialized Pet Solutions Come In?

As your prosthetist, we will generally communicate primarily with your vet about all of the specifics of the prosthetics. We’ll make sure we discuss everything we’ve discussed above as well as anything more that needs to be discussed in order to determine the right fit for your pet the first time. 

 

We will ship you a casting kit along with everything you need to cast your pet. If you are not comfortable casting your pet, please make an appointment with your veterinarian to assist you in the casting process. Your veterinarian will be involved in this process, so having them cast your pet for you may be a good idea; if they are familiar with your pet and you feel comfortable casting the animal, it isn’t necessary to have the vet do the casting, however.

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If you have any questions throughout the process please contact us

If a prosthetic device isn’t right for your animal, they may be able to use an orthotic device. You can read more about that process here

We look forward to working with you and your pet!

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