Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Signs and tissue findings in dogs after gallbladder removal
By Viljoen, A D et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2021·Vets4Pets Torquay, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical characteristics and histology of cholecystectomised dogs with nongravity-dependent biliary sludge: 16 cases (2014-2019).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 16 dogs with gall bladder issues underwent surgery to remove their gall bladders due to a condition called nongravity-dependent biliary sludge, which can cause symptoms like lack of appetite in the morning and difficulty exercising. After the surgery, most dogs showed significant improvement, with 86% of them no longer experiencing appetite issues and 81% overall feeling better. The study found that inflammation in the intestines might affect how the gall bladder works in these dogs. This suggests that early signs of gall bladder problems can be subtle and may not always show up as obvious symptoms.
People also search for: dog gall bladder surgery recovery · why is my dog not eating in the morning · dog exercise intolerance treatment
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To report the available histology, biochemistry and clinical progression of dogs without classic overt biliary tract signs that underwent cholecystectomy for nongravity-dependent biliary sludge. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Case series of client-owned dogs for which a cholecystectomy was performed for nongravity-dependent biliary sludge. In six dogs, for which nongravity-dependent biliary sludge filled less than half of gall bladder volume, gall bladder ejection fractions were measured. Available histology, biochemistry, presenting clinical signs and post-surgical clinical progression were reported. RESULTS: Sixteen dogs were included in this retrospective case series. No dogs met the histological criteria for gall bladder mucocoeles or had histological evidence of primary hepatitis or cholangitis. Biochemistry was normal for 11 dogs. Hypercholesterolaemia was not noted in any dog. Twelve dogs had cholecystitis (11 lymphoplasmacytic, one neutrophilic) and nine dogs had biliary mucosal hyperplasia. Thirteen dogs had enteritis (12 lymphoplasmacytic, one eosinophilic) and nine dogs had reactive hepatitis (eight lymphoplasmacytic, one neutrophilic). All six dogs with nongravity-dependent biliary sludge that filled less than half of gall bladder volume had sub-optimal gall bladder function. Presenting clinical signs, including diurnal inappetence in the morning and exercise intolerance, resolved in 86% (12/14) of dogs after cholecystectomy and clinical improvement was noted in 81% (13/16) of dogs overall. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Duodenal inflammation could potentially impact gall bladder dysmotility in dogs with nongravity-dependent biliary sludge. Furthermore, diurnal inappetence in the morning and exercise intolerance could indicate symptomatic gall bladder disease in dogs with NDBS and can potentially precede more obvious systemic clinical signs associated with gall bladder mucocoeles.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33629392/