After brain surgery to remove the nail, one thing is sure - Max has a sore head. Owner Tim Horvat said Max was fascinated by the noise of the gun as he pumped nails into the backyard decking he was building. Just a couple of planks short of finishing the job, he ordered Max to move away. As he resumed work with the nail gun, Max lunged at it and a steel nail blasted into his head.
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"At first I thought I had missed him because he ran behind me," Mr Horvat said. "But then I saw the tip just protruding from his head and I started shaking as I realised what had happened." When Max collapsed, Mr Horvat and wife Rose raced him to a local vet before he was transferred to surgeon Simon Kudnig at the Melbourne Veterinary Specialist Centre.
Dr Kudnig said it was the first time he had seen a dog injured by a nail gun. "I was amazed he was still conscious and alert and I kept thinking it must not have gone into his brain cavity," he said. But stunning X-rays showed the reality: Max had missed death by little more than a hair's width. He knew the nail had to come out, but carefully considered the risks of the delicate surgery.
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"You can't just grab the nail and pull it out," he said. "Craniectomies to remove part of the skull are not uncommon to remove brain tumors, but it was a first to remove a nail," he said. The operation involved removing a piece of Max's skull and then drilling around the embedded nail to loosen and finally pull it free. Within days Max was back to his bouncing best. Despite the $4000 hole in his pocket, Mr Horvat was thrilled. "I love him to death."
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