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George the goldfish gets life-saving tumor surgery

The complex procedure "went swimmingly," according to a statement from the Australian animal hospital where the operation took place.

Agata Blaszczak-Boxe CBSNews.com Writer
Agata Blaszczak-Boxe is a freelance journalist with a love for print, photography and video. She has written for CBSNews.com, Psychology Today, DAME Magazine, Live Science and other publications. She specializes in health and science reporting.
Agata Blaszczak-Boxe
2 min read

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George the goldfish undergoes a life-saving surgery. Nicole Dorling/Lort Smith

A goldfish named George underwent a life-saving operation last week to remove a tumor on its head.

"The surgery went swimmingly and George has now returned home with his loving owner," said a statement on the Facebook page of Lort Smith Animal Hospital, a nonprofit organization in Melbourne, Australia, where the procedure took place.

Dr. Tristan Rich, who performed the 45-minute-long operation, said that prior to the surgery, the 10-year-old George was unable to swim and eat properly, and was starting to "really suffer," reported the Sydney Morning Herald. When Rich told the fish's owner that the only two options were either surgically removing the tumor or putting George to sleep, she decided to do everything she could to save the fish, as she was "quite attached" to him.

The surgery cost about $200 -- the same a dog or cat guardian would pay, the paper reported.

Operating on a fish is "a very fiddly procedure, and you have to be very careful about blood loss," Rich said. So how did the vet do it?

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George the goldfish on the operating table. Nicole Dorling/Lort Smith

First, he prepared three buckets: "one with a knock-out dose of anaesthetic, one with a maintenance level of anaesthetic, and one with clean water as the recovery unit," according to Lort Smith's Facebook page.

When the fish was asleep, Rich ran a tube from the maintenance bucket, which was being oxygenated, into the mouth of the "patient" so that the water with the anesthetic washed over the animal's gills.

The doctor then removed the large tumor while using a gelatine sponge to control the bleeding during surgery. To make sure the sizeable wound was sealed, the vet put in four sutures, sealing the remaining part of the wound with tissue glue.

George was then transferred to a recovery unit and given oxygen. He also received injections with long-acting pain relievers and antibiotics.

"Soon afterwards he took a couple of breaths on his own and started swimming around," the hospital reported.

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The goldfish surgery "went swimmingly," according to a Facebook post by Lort Smith Animal Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Nicole Dorling/Lort Smith

This story originally appeared on CBSNews.com.