Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Ultrasound findings of stomach muscle changes in dogs and what they
By Heng, Hock Gan et al.·Published in Acta veterinaria Scandinavica·2018·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical and histopathologic findings in dogs with the ultrasonographic appearance of gastric muscularis unorganized hyperechoic striations.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs underwent abdominal ultrasounds, and 37.5% showed unusual patterns in the stomach muscle layer, known as unorganized hyperechoic striations (UHS). These patterns were more easily seen when the stomach was empty. In a smaller group that had both ultrasounds and postmortem examinations, the prevalence dropped to 5.4%. Some dogs with UHS had fibrous tissue in their stomach muscles, but the overall importance of these findings is still unclear.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ultrasonographic appearance of unorganized hyperechoic striations (UHS) has been observed in the canine gastric muscularis layer. The purpose of the study was to determine the prevalence, sonographic and postmortem histologic features, and to determine the clinical significance of canine gastric muscularis UHS. In the prospective study, 72 dogs were included. The presence of gastric muscularis UHS were reviewed to determine its distribution and location. In the retrospective study, 167 dogs that had both abdominal ultrasonography and necropsy were included. RESULTS: The prevalence of gastric muscularis UHS in dogs was 37.5% in the prospective and 5.4% in the retrospective studies respectively. The higher prevalence in prospective study was due to greater anticipation by the radiologists in search for gastric muscularis UHS. In the ventral gastric wall, the muscularis UHS were better defined when the gastric lumen was empty or non-distended, and were mostly parallel with the serosa when the gastric wall was distended (with gas or fluid). Visualization of the dorsal gastric wall was often obscured by gas shadowing from luminal gas. Histopathology was performed on eight dogs with gastric muscularis UHS, three of which had fibrous tissue observed with Masson's trichrome stain. CONCLUSION: Presence of gastric muscularis UHS in dogs may have been attributable to presence of incomplete interfaces between the inner oblique, middle circular and outer longitudinal layers of the gastric tunica muscularis or due to presence of fibrous tissue within the gastric muscularis layer. The clinical significance of canine gastric muscularis UHS is uncertain.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29426352/