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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Trauma cases in dogs and cats from 2017 to 2019 report

By Kelly E Hall et al.·Published in Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care·2023·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: ACVECC-Veterinary Committee on Trauma registry report 2017-2019.

Plain-English summary

A large study looked at trauma cases in dogs and cats treated at specialized veterinary trauma centers over a three-year period. Out of over 20,000 dogs and 4,000 cats, most were brought in after being hit by vehicles, with dogs having a lower survival rate compared to cats in similar situations. Despite the severity of some injuries, the overall survival rate was high, with 93% of dogs and 82% of cats surviving their hospital stay. This data can help improve treatment and outcomes for pets with traumatic injuries in the future.

People also search for: dog hit by car survival rate · cat trauma treatment · veterinary trauma center statistics

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To report summative data from the American College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Veterinary Committee on Trauma (VetCOT) registry. DESIGN Multi-institutional registry data report, April 1, 2017 to December 31, 2019. SETTING VetCOT identified and verified Veterinary Trauma Centers (VTCs). ANIMALS Dogs and cats with evidence of trauma. INTERVENTIONS Data were input to a web-based data capture system (Research Electronic Data Capture) by data entry personnel trained in data software use and operational definitions of data variables. Data on demographics, trauma type, preadmission care, trauma severity assessment at presentation (modified Glasgow Coma Scale and Animal Trauma Triage score), key laboratory parameters, interventions, and case outcome were collected. Summary descriptive data for each species are reported. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Thirty-one VTCs contributed data from 20,842 canine and 4003 feline trauma cases during the 33-month reporting period. Most cases presented directly to a VTC (82.1% dogs, 82.1% cats). Admission to hospital rates were slightly lower in dogs (27.8%) than cats (32.7%). Highest mortality rates by mechanism of injury in dogs were struck by vehicle (18.3%), ballistic injury (17.6%), injured inside vehicle (13.2%), nonpenetrating bite wound (10.2%), and choking/pulling injury (8.5%). Highest mortality rates by mechanism of injury in cats were struck by vehicle (43.3%), ejected from vehicle (33.3%), nonpenetrating bite wound (30.7%), ballistic injury (27.8%), and choking/pulling injury (25.0%). The proportion of animals surviving to discharge was 93.1% (dogs) and 82.5% (cats). CONCLUSIONS The VetCOT registry is a powerful resource for collection of a large dataset on trauma in dogs and cats seen at VTCs. Overall survival to discharge was high indicating low injury severity for most recorded cases. Further evaluation of data on subsets of injury types, patient assessment parameters, interventions, and associated outcome are warranted. Data from the registry can be leveraged to inform clinical trial design and justification for naturally occurring trauma as a translational model to improve veterinary and human trauma patient outcome.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/37087555