Dog treated at UF survives sepsis from infection believed due to cat scratch

After two full months of treatment at UF's Small Animal Hospital, Suki has recovered well at home.

By Sarah Carey
Suki's care team with her and her owners on day of discharge from UFSAH

Suki with her owners and members of her care team on the day of her discharge from UF’s Small Animal Hospital.

The month of March was not kind to Brandi and Chris Hrebenak. Early that month, their dog, Suki, developed sepsis from a rampant infection believed to have been caused by a scratch from a stray cat, and wound up at UF’s Small Animal Hospital for two full months of treatment that included multiple surgeries and wound management.

The weeks that followed were a roller coaster with Suki’s condition, including decisions the Deltona couple needed to make about how far to go with their beloved pet’s care. As they desperately worked to set up fundraising sites and traveled back and forth to Gainesville to visit Suki during her hospital stay, Brandi lost her mother.

“This was one of the most trying times we have ever been through,” Brandi said.

Suki was discharged May 1 and is now back to her playful self.

“We will be forever grateful to the entire staff from reception, to the doctors, technicians and students that tended to Suki,” Brandi said. “Because of these wonderful people, we’ve got our girl back.”

The Hrebenaks said they are still in touch with “the wonderful doctors at UF” to relay Suki’s ongoing status.

Suki’s journey began March 2, when the Hrebenaks first noticed she had a swollen ear. From that day to her admission to UF five days later, she had visited three other veterinarians, who ultimately recognized that Suki was septic and would need more extensive in-patient treatment and monitoring that only UF could provide.

“Everything happened so quickly,” Brandi said. “During the first week Suki was at UF, we were hopeful. By March 14, she seemed to have been improving from all the treatments, which included the hyperbaric chamber, antibiotics, blood and plasma transfusions. We received a call that morning that she was looking better, and we would probably be able to bring her home later that week.”

But it was not to be. Later that same day, the couple received a call from UF’s care team that Suki’s tissue had become necrotic.

“We were told treating Suki would require debridement, and her chance of survival was slim,” Brandi said. “That evening was an extremely low point for us, hearing that she would require surgery to live and might not even make it through the surgery, and also that doctors would assess and could stop at any point, and we might have to make the decision to have her euthanized on the table or have her stabilized long enough for us to make the two-and-a-half-hour drive to say goodbye.

“We were devastated,” Brandi said. “I called my mom and a good friend for guidance. Ultimately, we decided that Suki should have a chance; even though her body was failing her, she still had the spirit and the will to live.”

The next day, the couple were on pins and needles waiting for a call, afraid at any moment they would be informed Suki didn’t make it. But when Sophie Eiger, V.M.D., a small animal surgery resident, called, her news for the Hrebenaks was good.

“She told us the surgery went well, and they believed they removed the necrotic tissue,” Brandi said. “This same feeling would occur with each surgery Suki received: waiting for that phone call and all the while trying to remind ourselves that no news was good news.”

The Hrebeneks with Suki

Chris and Brandi Hrebenak with Suki on the day of her discharge.

On May 1, Suki was finally able to go home. That Wednesday, the Hrebenaks brought her back for a bandage change, and picked her up toward the end of the day.

“Our student mentioned there was a parade planned for her, but we were shocked,” Brandi said. “We weren’t expecting an actual parade where the audience was composed of all the wonderful UF personnel that contributed in helping with Suki’s recovery.”

Suki’s initial care team included Emergency and Critical Care faculty and staff, but as of March 15, her care was primarily provided by members of the Soft Tissue Surgery team.

The Hrebenaks said they would always be grateful to the entire team from reception workers to the veterinarians, technicians and students who tended to their beloved pet.

“We can’t thank them enough for the love and compassion they showed, not only to Suki, but to us, during one of the most trying times we’ve ever been through,” Brandi said. “This experience has been emotionally, physically, mentally and financially draining.”

She added that after unexpectedly losing her mother on March 31, she didn’t feel like she could go on at times.

“But I still had Suki to worry about,” Brandi said. “The last thing my mom was doing on this earth was sharing Suki’s story with as many people as she could, and in any way she could, in an effort to create awareness and also assist with our fundraising efforts.”

Her mother was a huge animal lover as well, Brandi said.

“She would have been so disappointed in me if I gave up,” she said. “Chris and I don’t have human children. Suki is a huge part of our family. We did what we needed to do for our furry child, and you can’t put a price on love.”