Pit Bull Puppy Is Just A Poop Away From The Rest Of His Beautiful Life

"New opportunities and adventures will be open to Colt if he can poop like every other puppy."

Jean Keating has one quite personal hope for her foster dog Colt: that the pit bull pup will poop. 

"New opportunities and adventures will be open to Colt if he can poop like every other puppy," Keating says. 

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Jean Keating

Colt's funky bowels have been the focus of Keating's attention for quite some time now. 

This past April, when he arrived at her Ohio home, Colt was a tiny dog with a big problem.

Seven weeks old, and just 2.68 pounds, the wee pit bull had been spotted for sale online, by a volunteer with Keating's rescue group, the Lucas County Pit Crew.

It was clear from his photos that the puppy was very sick. 

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Jean Keating

Colt had some sort of infection in the beginning, possibly from a botched surgery to fix what is now assumed to have been an anal prolapse (that means some of his rectal tissue was poking out of his behind). 

The vet wasn't sure he'd make it, given how sick he was. Keating had already fallen in love with Colt, and decided to take him home. If necessary, she'd give him hospice care.

But within about a week Colt was eating up a storm and putting on some weight. His friendly, clown-like personality was shining through and he was making fast friends with Keating's other dogs -- but he still wasn't excreting in the usual way.

"He drips," says Keating -- which gets all over, and, more seriously, represents what could be a profoundly disabling condition.

It was determined that Colt now had a "rectal stricture" -- a band of scar tissue that narrowed his anal opening -- making it hard to get everything out and causing him a lot of pain. 

"He was uncomfortable and was having some serious complications from getting so backed up," says Jim Whitehead, a veterinarian with Blue Pearl Veterinary Partners, who oversaw Colt's case.

If Colt wasn't treated, he could become completely constipated, and stop eating or drinking. Whitehead says he would then die, or have to be euthanized.

Colt's first surgery (with another vet) didn't take. In May and then again in June, Whitehead used an inflated balloon to stretch out the scar tissue nonsurgically.

That, too, didn't work as well as Keating and the doctors had hoped. At least not at first.

"Colt continued to sort of drip and not really poop," Keating says.

Keating was scheduled to go to a conference in mid-July. Her "heart was heavy," she says, knowing that Colt's quality of life could become poor, and she might have a very difficult decision to make, when she returned.

But the day before she left, something wonderful happened.

"I looked down, and there was real poop. It was formed and semi-solid," Keating says. "I burst into tears." 

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Jean Keating

But Colt went back to his old, constipated ways. And so late this week, Keating brought him back to Blue Pearl for another operation, to widen the little guy's rectum.

She is feeling cautiously optimistic about the results.

"It's his best shot at having a wonderful life," she explains.

Colt is still in the hospital, as of Friday. Whitehead says the procedure went well. Colt's active and eating, and has even pooped a little. But not quite enough for him to come home yet.

Keating, of course, is eager to get her now-12-pound foster puppy home.

"I love him to the moon and back," she says. "With all the poop I clean up on a daily basis, it's a little crazy that I am so excited for more poop."

Yes, Keating's short term goal is for Colt to produce a series of solid, respectable BMs.

Longer-term, her ambitions are a little further off the ground: once he's well enough, for this trooper of a pittie to be adopted by people who will love him for "the incredible little puppy that he is."

"All he wants is to share his zest of life," says Keating. "And that is perfect, because his forever family will appreciate that sometimes love is messy."

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Jean Keating

 

Keep tabs on Colt's progress on the Lucas County Pit Crew Facebook page.

And get in touch at arin.greenwood@huffingtonpost.com if you have an animal story to share! 

10 Stereotypes About Pit Bulls That Are Just. Dead. Wrong.
Doesn't Banning Pit Bulls Make People Safer?(01 of10)
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Bans and restrictions on pit bull ownership are called "breed-specific legislation" -- and the studies that have looked at these laws find they don't make communities any safer. Which stands to reason. For one, there's no evidence that pit bulls are, in fact, more dangerous than other dogs. And for another, breed identification is nearly impossible. After an attack, police and newspaper accounts rely on witnesses to accurately identify the attacking dog's breed, a task that studies have found even veterinarians and other animal care professionals can't do with much accuracy. See if you're any better with this online quiz.The restrictions are also expensive -- the group Best Friends Animal Society has an online calculator you can use to see how much breed-specific legislation costs. Enforcement of Miami's breed-specific legislation is said to cost the city more than $600,000 per year. A task force charged with examining a pit bull ban in Prince George's County -- in Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C. -- found enforcement of the ban cost $560,000 over two years, without any public safety benefits.Groups like the American Bar Association and the Centers for Disease Control have come out against breed-specific legislation. President Barack Obama, in a statement, said that these restrictions are "largely ineffective and often a waste of public resources." Community-based approaches to dog bite prevention are a preferred alternative. (credit:http://www.petsadviser.com/Flickr)
But Wait, I Heard Pit Bulls Are Inherently Vicious(02 of10)
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Nope, they aren't. Like all dogs, pit bulls are individuals.The term "pit bull" doesn't actually refer to a specific breed of dog. It's a catch-all term that usually means dogs who are one of a couple of types of terriers -- American Pit Bull Terriers and Staffordshire terriers are the usual ones -- or dogs who resemble these terriers in some physical ways, but who may or may not actually have any genetic relationship to these kinds of dogs. (You may be surprised to learn that animal shelters, rescues, newspaper reporters and the police don't, by and large, genetically test the dogs they label as pit bulls; they just make their best guesses. Which are often very wrong.)All this means that pit bulls aren't inherently anything, other than dogs with a blocky-shaped head. And of course the shape of a dog's head tells you exactly nothing about that dog's personality. Educate yourself on the best ways to avoid dog bites. Learn to read a dog's signals; teach your kids the correct way to approach a dog of any kind. That's a much more effective way to stay safe -- and certainly better than implementing policies that restrict dog ownership based on physical appearance instead of actual behavior. (credit:Angela Eden)
Pit Bulls Are Bred For Fighting, Though, Right?(03 of10)
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Most pit bulls aren't bred for anything — by and large they're mutts, plain and simple, who happen to share a similarly blocky-shaped head. But even those dogs who are bred for fighting — like Little Red here, who was one of Michael Vick's pit bulls -- can turn out to make great pets once they're free from their abusive environments. (credit:Best Friends Animal Society)
Don't They Have Locking Jaws?(04 of10)
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They don't. Pit bulls have just the same old mouths as every other kind of dog -- and not even the strongest around.An academic study, "Cranial dimensions and forces of biting in the domestic dog," does show that bigger- and wider-skulled dogs have stronger bites. It's worth noting, though, that not all pit bulls have big, wide skulls -- these dogs come in a huge variety of sizes, especially compared to the world of dogs at large. And, it goes without saying -- though I'll say it anyway -- that even if a dog has a big, wide skull, this does not make the dog any more likely to bite.*No one, meantime, has found any dog to have a locking jaw. This anatomical trait is a myth.*Thanks to Twitter user @CitizenKarl for getting in touch with a clarification about this study's findings. (credit:Pretty Poo Eater/Flickr)
Someone Told Me Pit Bulls Aren't Good With Kids(05 of10)
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Want to tell that to Handsome Dan? This guy is another of Michael Vick's former dogs -- he was the first to be placed in a home with a baby, and now he's an unstoppable cuddlebug.So yes, some pit bulls really are great with kids. And some aren't, just as with all kinds of dogs. Want to keep your kids safe around dogs, pit bulls or otherwise? Make sure to supervise them, teach little humans the right way to approach and interact with our canine friends and pay attention to the signals a particular dog is giving off. Also, keep in mind that a dog's breed does not tell you how good that dog is with kids -- so you can't assume a beagle is safe any more than you can assume a pit bull isn't. (credit:HANDSOME DAN/ALEKSANDRA GAJDECZKA)
But Surely They Aren't Safe Around Other Dogs(06 of10)
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Did you hear the story about Joanie the pit bull and her best friend in the world, Chachi the Chihuahua? This pair was found roaming the streets of Savannah, Georgia. Joanie was carrying the badly-injured Chachi in her mouth to keep him safe -- and since they can't bear to be apart, the two have now been adopted, together, and are on their way to a new life in Florida.Not to beat a dead horse -- we love horses here, too -- but it all depends on the individual dog. A dog being labeled a pit bull tells you nothing about how that pup will be with other dogs. And regardless of breed, good socialization is always recommended, to help dogs play nice. (credit:Savannah-Chatham Metropolitan Police Department)
Pit Bulls Can Never Be Trusted With Other Animals, Though(07 of10)
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This is Boom. Boom is a Staffordshire bull terrier who is a champion athlete, and a world-class buddy to baby chickens and bunnies.Some pit bulls are great with other animals. Some are not. It depends on the individual dog, not on the shape of the dog's head. (credit:Carla, Working Terriers)
Once A Fighting Dog, Always A Fighting Dog?(08 of10)
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You can be forgiven for believing that dogs trained to fight can never become family pets. A lot of people -- including prominent rescue groups -- shared that belief, until 2008, when until Michael Vick's pit bulls were given the chance to prove otherwise.Prove otherwise they have. Twenty-two of the most severely abused dogs -- now known as "Vicktory dogs" -- were rehabilitated by Best Friends Animal Society. See for yourself how much love they get, and give, today. These pit bulls are a true testament to how resilient dogs are -- and how even those who have suffered the most can thrive.Believe it or not, the dog sticking her tongue out in this photo was also rescued from fighting. Her name is Bumper now. She and her brother Willis are just aggressively affectionate. (credit:Lynn Terry)
They Say All Pit Bulls Eventually Turn On Their Owners(09 of10)
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My pit bull Barky lived to about 14. She was a beloved family pet from the day she was found abandoned in a New York park until the heartbreaking day we decided it would be kinder for the veterinarian to stick a needle in her than to let her die from an otherwise-inevitable stroke or heart attack. This dog, who changed my life, never hurt anyone through the course of the decade and a half we were lucky enough to have her.Barky was hardly alone. Indeed, the statistics show how incredibly rare it is for any dog to turn on anyone, let alone for one specific type of dog to turn on their owners. There are thought to be fewer than 30 people killed in dog attacks per year -- a vanishingly small number, considering that some 70-80 million dogs are owned in the United States.While some make broad claims about the breeds of dog most often responsible for the fatal bites, the data shows that breed isn't actually a factor. According to the most recent comprehensive examination of fatal bites in the United States, which was published last December in the Journal of the American Veterinarian Medical Association, breed could only even be identified in 45 incidents. Of those, two mutts, and more than 20 other breeds, were responsible for the attacks. Non-fatal dog bites are, unfortunately, not so uncommon. According to the CDC, about 4.5 million dog bites are reported every year. Of those, about 885,000 required medical attention. But, again, while hysterical media reports may lead people to believe that pit bulls are to blame, the fact is that no reliable evidence substantiates that belief. Some pit bulls bite. Some of any kind of dog will bite. There is simply no reliable data supporting the assertion that pit bulls are more likely to bite than than the others. And the many, many thousands of pit bull owners who have seen their pets reach their natural ends can tell you, too, that no, pit bulls do not all eventually turn on their owners. (credit:Arin Greenwood)
Maybe Only Bad People Keep Pit Bulls, Then(10 of10)
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Baltimore Raven Torrey Smith would beg to differ. So would Channing Tatum, Jessica Biel, Jon Stewart and Gisele Bundchen -- as well as hundreds of thousands of responsible non-celebrities whose pit bulls are treasured family members.It doesn't take a bad person, or an exceptionally strong or dominant person, to raise a pit bull. It takes a good dog owner. Pit bulls, in the end, are nothing more -- and nothing less -- than dogs. (credit:Show Your Soft Side)

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