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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Complications from temporary tracheostomy tubes in 42 dogs

By Nicholson, I & Baines, S·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2012·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Complications associated with temporary tracheostomy tubes in 42 dogs (1998 to 2007).

Species:
dog
Breathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 42 dogs, including many bulldogs, underwent temporary tracheostomy (a procedure to help with breathing) and faced complications in 36 of those cases. Bulldogs were more likely to have issues with their tubes and had a higher chance of an unsuccessful outcome. Despite the high complication rate, 81% of the dogs managed to have their tubes successfully removed or were euthanized without major problems. Proper care and monitoring during treatment can improve outcomes, especially for bulldogs and dogs that experience slow heart rates (bradycardia).

People also search for: dog breathing problems tracheostomy · bulldog tracheostomy complications · dog tube removal care

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify the type and frequency of tracheostomy tube complications, and to determine factors associated with these complications, and with poor outcome. METHODS: A database search for dogs undergoing temporary tube tracheostomy was performed. The medical records were scrutinised. The signalment, respiratory disease history, diagnosis, surgery, type and frequency of tube care procedures, type of complications and outcome were recorded. RESULTS: Forty-two records were found. Complications occurred in 36 of 42 (86%) cases. Bulldogs were more likely to dislodge the tube than other breeds (P=0·0376), and cases with three or more complication types underwent more routine care procedures than those with fewer complications (P=0·0370). Thirty-four of 42 (81%) dogs had a successfully managed tracheostomy tube and survived until tube removal, or elective euthanasia without significant tube complications. Bulldogs were also significantly (P=0·0376) more likely to have an unsuccessful tube outcome, as were dogs experiencing severe bradycardia during treatment (P=0·0176). Dogs with unsuccessful tube outcome were significantly (P=0·0331) younger than dogs with successful tube outcome. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Tracheostomy tubes in dogs have a high complication rate but a good outcome in most dogs. Careful management may improve the outcome of dogs with tracheostomy tubes, especially bulldogs and dogs exhibiting bradycardia during treatment.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22283793/