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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How CT bile scan helped diagnose bile leak in a dog

By Tamura, Masahiro et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Department of Companion Animal Clinical Sciences, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Case Report: Usefulness of Drip Infusion Cholangiography With Computed Tomography for the Diagnosis of Biloma in a Dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 10-year-old male Pomeranian was brought to the vet for gastrointestinal issues and was found to have a biloma, which is a collection of bile outside the bile ducts. The vet used a special imaging technique called drip infusion cholangiography with computed tomography (DIC-CT) to locate the source of the bile leak. After identifying the problem, the dog was hospitalized for six days, during which the fluid accumulation decreased. The dog then underwent surgery to remove the gallbladder and was discharged without any complications. Follow-up imaging showed no signs of bile leakage.

People also search for: dog biloma treatment · Pomeranian gastrointestinal issues · gallbladder surgery for dogs

Abstract

Bilomas are encapsulated collections of bile outside or inside the biliary tract within the abdominal cavity. For diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, it is important to identify the origin of bile leaks from the biliary tract. This case report describes the usefulness of drip infusion cholangiography with computed tomography (DIC-CT) for detecting the site of bile leakage in a dog with biloma. A 10-year-old, castrated male Pomeranian dog was referred to our department for gastrointestinal signs. Abdominal ultrasonography detected gallbladder mucocele without evidence of defect on the wall and well-defined anechoic localized fluid accumulation around the right division of the liver. On the other hand, there was only a small amount of ascites in the abdominal cavity. The accumulated fluid collected through abdominocentesis had a bilirubin concentration of 11.4 mg/dl, which was more than twice as high as that in serum (0.4 mg/dl), but had absence of pyogenic bacteria. The DIC-CT with meglumine iotroxate showed two well-defined large fluid collections: one between right medial and lateral lobe and the other between the right lateral lobe and caudate process of caudate lobe. Three-dimensional DIC-CT views that the former was enhanced by the contrast agent and that it communicated with an intrahepatic bile duct of the right lateral lobe. Moreover, the DIC-CT images confirmed communication with each fluid collections. After 6 days of hospitalization, a decrease in the amount of accumulated fluid was confirmed, after which cholecystectomy was performed. The dog was discharged from the hospital without complications. No signs of bile leakage were observed on follow-up imaging on postoperative day 10. According to authors knowledge, this has been the first report to show that DIC-CT can be useful for determining the origin of bile leakage in dogs with bilomas.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35321057/