Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Facial swelling in dogs from parotid duct ectasia and surgery results
By Martinez, I et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2024·VetsNow High Wycombe, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical findings, surgical treatment and outcome in dogs with parotid duct ectasia: 14 cases (2010-2023).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 14 dogs with swelling on the side of their faces was diagnosed with parotid duct ectasia, a condition where the salivary duct becomes enlarged. A CT scan showed a fluid-filled structure in the affected area. To treat this, veterinarians performed various surgical procedures, including removing part of the duct or marsupializing it (creating an opening to allow drainage). After surgery, none of the dogs showed any signs of the problem returning, indicating a positive outcome for all cases.
People also search for: dog facial swelling treatment · parotid duct ectasia in dogs · dog surgery for salivary duct issues
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical presentation, diagnostic findings, surgical treatment and outcome of dogs diagnosed with parotid duct ectasia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Medical records of dogs diagnosed with parotid duct ectasia between 2010 and 2023 at six small animal referral hospitals were retrospectively reviewed. Outcome was assessed by contacting the owners or referring veterinarians. RESULTS: Fourteen dogs were included. Lateral facial swelling was the most common clinical presentation. CT revealed a tortuous cavitary tubular fluid-filled structure consistent with a dilated parotid duct in all dogs. Surgical treatment included marsupialisation of the parotid duct papilla, surgical exploration of the duct alone, parotid duct marsupialisation with surgical exploration of the duct, parotidectomy or en-bloc parotid duct resection. The aetiology of parotid duct ectasia was not established in 13 of 14 dogs. In one case, a foreign body was retrieved from the duct. No recurrence of clinical signs was noted during the follow-up period (range 21 to 2900 days). CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Parotid duct ectasia should be considered for dogs with a lateralised fluctuant non-painful tubular facial swelling. Surgical management was associated with a favourable prognosis without evidence of recurrence in all cases reported in the case series.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37936527/