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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Complications after two types of stomach surgery in dogs compared

By Mann, F A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2023·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of incisional gastropexy with and without addition of two full-thickness stomach to body wall sutures.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A study looked at two surgical techniques for preventing stomach twisting (gastric dilatation-volvulus) in dogs, comparing a standard method to a modified version that uses extra stitches to secure the stomach. The research involved 347 dogs that underwent either surgery, and it found no significant differences in complications between the two methods. This means that both techniques are safe, and veterinarians can choose the modified technique if they believe it may help with the surgery's success without worrying about increased risks.

People also search for: dog stomach twisting surgery · gastropexy complications in dogs · modified gastropexy technique

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare complications between a modified incisional gastropexy (MIG) technique and standard incisional gastropexy (SIG). ANIMALS: 347 client-owned dogs. PROCEDURES: Dogs that had undergone SIG or MIG from March 2005 through April 2019 were identified through a medical record search of the University of Missouri Veterinary Health Center. The MIG technique is identical to SIG except 2 additional simple interrupted sutures are added, 1 cranial and 1 caudal to the continuous suture line, going full thickness into the stomach to ensure engagement of submucosa. Medical record information was used to identify intraoperative, postoperative, and short-term complications, and telephone or email communication to pet owners and/or referring veterinarians was used to identify complications (short-term and long-term) after discontinuance of care at the University of Missouri Veterinary Health Center. Intraoperative, postoperative, short-term, and long-term complications were analyzed in aggregate within 6 matched groupings: (1) gastropexy for gastric dilatation-volvulus, (2) prophylactic gastropexy without other procedures, (3) gastropexy with ovariohysterectomy, (4) gastropexy with castration, (5) gastropexy with splenectomy, and (6) gastropexy with celiotomy other than splenectomy. Overall rates of complications potentially attributed to gastropexy were compared between SIG and MIG using the Fisher exact test. Overall rates of complications not attributed to gastropexy were compared between SIG and MIG using the χ2 test. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in overall complication rates between SIG and MIG. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Surgeons who feel that engagement of gastric submucosa is important for gastropexy success may use the MIG technique with minimal fear of complications. However, superiority of one technique over the other cannot be determined on the basis of this study.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37257832/