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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Tumor surgery and cheek flap repair in two dogs

By Tuohy, Joanne L et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2019·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Bilateral caudal maxillectomy for resection of tumors crossing palatal midline and use of the angularis oris axial pattern flap for primary closure or dehiscence repair in two dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Two dogs with tumors in their upper jaw underwent surgery to remove the growths, which were affecting their palates. After the surgery, both dogs faced some complications, including issues with healing that required additional procedures. However, the surgeries were successful, and both dogs recovered well, regaining good function and quality of life. This type of surgery can be effective for removing similar tumors, even when complications arise.

People also search for: dog mouth tumor surgery · dog jaw surgery recovery · dog oral tumor treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the technique and outcomes for bilateral caudal maxillectomy for resection of large caudal maxillary tumors crossing palatal midline in two dogs. STUDY DESIGN: Clinical case report. ANIMALS: Two client-owned dogs. METHODS: Two client-owned dogs with primary caudal maxillary tumors, a poorly differentiated sarcoma, and a multilobulated osteochondrosarcoma. Bilateral caudal maxillectomies were performed for curative-intent resection of these tumors. The angularis oris axial pattern flap was used for primary closure in one dog and for dehiscence repair in the other. RESULTS: Both tumors were resected with complete histologic margins. The defects were closed with local buccal mucosal flaps, with or without a unilateral angularis oris flap. Esophagostomy tubes were placed at time of surgery to bypass oral feeding. Incisional dehiscence and subsequent oronasal fistula formation occurred as a postoperative complication in both dogs (3 and 10 days, respectively). Both were successfully repaired with a combination of local buccal mucosal flaps and the angularis oris flap. Both dogs had good functional outcome and quality of life after recovery from revision surgery. CONCLUSION: Bilateral caudal maxillectomy allowed resection of caudal maxillary tumors crossing palatal midline, with good function and quality of life after recovery in 2 dogs. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Good outcomes including complete resections are achievable with bilateral caudal maxillectomy despite complications. Local mucosal and axial pattern flaps can be used for dehiscence repair.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31179557/