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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with blocked vaginal passage and missing kidney

By Choo, Younwoo et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Department of Veterinary Surgery, South Korea·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Diagnosis and surgical treatment of obstructed hemivagina and ipsilateral renal anomaly in a dog: a case report.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 10-year-old female Yorkshire Terrier was brought to the vet with symptoms like not eating, vomiting, and abdominal pain. After various imaging tests, the vet diagnosed her with a rare condition called OHVIRA syndrome, which involved an obstructed hemivagina and a missing kidney. The treatment involved surgery to remove the affected uterus and ovary, and to relieve the obstruction. Following the surgery, her symptoms improved quickly, and she showed no further issues during follow-up visits.

People also search for: dog vomiting and not eating · Yorkshire Terrier abdominal pain · OHVIRA syndrome treatment in dogs

Abstract

Obstructed hemivagina and ipsilateral renal agenesis (OHVIRA), also called Herlyn-Werner-Wunderlich syndrome, is an extremely rare Müllerian duct anomaly accompanied by Wolffian duct anomalies. A 10-year-old intact female Yorkshire Terrier weighing 3.35 kg was presented with anorexia, depression, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Radiography, ultrasonography, and computed tomography revealed uterine didelphys, obstructed hemivagina, a cystic structure around the right uterus, and right renal agenesis, leading to the diagnosis of OHVIRA syndrome. An ovariohysterectomy and decompression of the obstructed right hemivagina were performed, and the cystic structure near the right uterine horn was removed byresection, along with the right uterus and ovary. After the surgical intervention, the patient's symptoms including abdominal pain, anorexia, and depression were immediately resolved. The patient was followed up for 1 month postoperatively with ultrasonography at 2-week intervals, which revealed the progression of mild fluid retention in the right hemivagina. However, no additional urogenital findings were identified, and the patient continued to exhibit no overt clinical symptoms. This case report describes the diagnosis and surgical treatment of the first documented case of OHVIRA syndrome in an animal. Unlike in human medicine, where vaginal septectomy is performed to prevent dilatation of the obstructed hemivagina and thereby resolve clinical symptoms, performing ovariohysterectomy combined with fluid aspiration from the obstructed hemivagina showed a favorable postoperative prognosis in the dog.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39811148/