PetCare.
Est. 2009
Services
At Creekside Veterinary Clinic, we are committed to providing high quality and reliable veterinary services.
Veterinary Services
Get your pet vaccinated at Creekside Veterinary Hospital, where we are always ready to protect your faithful friend from the risks of disease.
Pets age faster than humans. While their lives progress more quickly, serious medical conditions do too. Annual pet wellness exams can help detect serious medical conditions and allowing Creekside Veterinary Hospital staff to treat them before their status becomes unmanageable.
Along with our general wellness services, we offer a comprehensive range of surgical health care options, making us a one-stop destination for all your pet’s veterinary needs.
Dental Prophylaxis: Safe, monitored anesthetic dental surgeries and procedures, including extractions and teeth cleaning. Prevention-based consultation, such as how to brush your pet’s teeth.
We offer wide range of surgical procedures like
- Lump removal
- Eyelid Mass removal
- Cherry Eye
- Abscess Repair
- Spay
- Neuter
Our in-house digital radiology equipment enables our veterinarians to take and process x-rays on-site in minutes. This allows us to view and diagnose any malformations that may be affecting your pet. We also receive a consultation from Board Certified Radiologists for challenging cases.
FAQs
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Payment is required in full at the time of service
Spaying or neutering can be done at approximately 6 months of age. Your pet is given an exam prior to surgery to help determine whether your pet is healthy enough to undergo the surgical procedure and current vaccinations are required at the time of surgery. Also a pre-anesthetic blood screen is recommended prior to undergoing anesthesia and surgery.
This is a blood test that is run here in the clinic prior to surgery. It tests the organ functions, blood counts and clotting function of your pet. The pre-anesthetic blood screening is done to assure safety during surgery and the ability to heal following surgery.
No, there is no advantage to letting your pet have one litter. However there are plenty of advantages to having your pet spayed or neutered. These advantages include decreasing the chances of breast tumors later in life, decreasing the chance of cystic ovaries and uterine infections later in life, decreasing the desire to roam the neighborhood, decreasing the incidence of prostate cancer later in life, helping prevent spraying and marking, and also decreasing the surplus of unwanted puppies and kittens.
Procedures involving sutures require them to be removed in 8-10 days following the surgery. Not all patients have sutures that need to be removed, so please check with you clinician.
Most likely, yes. However, it is essential to schedule a visit to the veterinarian. In rare cases, some diseases or situations can cause bad breath in the absence of, or in addition to, tooth/gum disease.
Conditions such as Kidney failure, diabetes, nasal or facial skin infections, oral cancers, or situations where the animal is ingesting feces or other materials, can cause bad breath with or without periodontal disease.