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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgery and endoscopy fix hiatal hernia in kitten with vomiting

By L. Pisoni et al.·Published in Veterinární Medicína·2014·School of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy, CZ·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Combined surgical and endoscopic approach for the reduction of a congenital hiatal hernia in a cat: a case report

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 7-month-old kitten was brought in for chronic vomiting, abdominal discomfort, and fast breathing after eating. The vet diagnosed a type I hiatal hernia using X-rays and a scope to look inside the stomach. The kitten underwent surgery to fix the hernia, but symptoms returned a week later, requiring a second surgery to reinforce the repair. After the second surgery, the kitten recovered well and showed no further signs of the hernia after a year.

People also search for: kitten vomiting after eating · cat breathing problems · hiatal hernia surgery in cats · cat abdominal discomfort treatment

Abstract

A case of surgical resolution of type I or "sliding" hiatal hernia is reported. A seven-month-old kitten was presented because of abdominal discomfort, accelerated breathing after eating and chronic vomiting. The clinical examination was unremarkable. Thoracic radiographs and gastroscopy led to the diagnosis of type I hiatal hernia. The surgical resolution consisted of hiatal plication, oesophagopexy and left-flank incisional gastropexy. All procedures were carried out using a 6 mm videoendoscope positioned in the stomach to evaluate the right oesophago-gastric junction reduction. One week after surgery there was a recurrence of symptoms and a second laparotomy was performed. During the second surgery additional hiatal plication was necessary and an oesophagopexy was repeated after dissection of the phrenico-oesophageal ligament. Moreover, a new incisional gastropexy was carried out after resolution of the first one. The cat recovered without complications and at one-year follow-up did show no signs related to the hiatal hernia. This communication reports on possible additional surgical techniques in cases of type I hiatal hernia and contributes to an understanding of the importance of oesophagopexy in cases of hiatus malformation.

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.17221/7385-VETMED