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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Skin staplers used to close dog gut surgery cuts with low

By Schwartz, Zeev & Coolman, Bradley RĀ·Published in Veterinary surgery : VSĀ·2018Ā·Northeast Indiana Veterinary Emergency and Specialty HospitalĀ·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Disposable skin staplers for closure of linear gastrointestinal incisions in dogs.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 333 dogs that underwent gastrointestinal surgery had their incisions closed with skin staples. Most dogs recovered well, but a small number experienced complications, including three that had issues with their incisions reopening and two that had foreign objects attached to the staples. The study found that using multiple incisions in one surgery and the presence of foreign bodies increased the risk of complications. Overall, skin staplers were found to be a safe and effective way to close surgical incisions in dogs, making the procedure more efficient and affordable.

People also search for: dog gastrointestinal surgery recovery Ā· skin staplers for dog surgery Ā· complications after dog surgery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To report the clinical features and outcomes of linear gastrointestinal incisions closed with skin staples in dogs. STUDY DESIGN: Historical cohort study. ANIMALS: 333 client-owned dogs. METHODS: Medical records from 1 private referral hospital were searched for dogs that underwent gastrointestinal surgery between November 1999 and October 2015. Cases were included if skin staplers were used to close linear gastrointestinal incisions. Information regarding preoperative, surgical, and postoperative factors was collected. RESULTS: Complications were diagnosed in 8 of 245 (3.27%) dogs, including 3 of 245 (1.22%) dogs that died or were euthanized, 3 of 245 (1.22%) dogs with incisional dehiscence, and 2 of 245 (0.81%) dogs with attachment of a linear foreign body to the staples at the intestinal lumen. Dehiscence was noted at the enterotomy sites in 3 dogs at a mean time of 44 hours after surgery (SD&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;6.93). Two dogs presented with another linear foreign body that was attached to the staples in the intestinal lumen at postoperative days 24 and 42. The risk factors associated with incisional dehiscence included multiple gastrointestinal incisions performed in 1 surgery (&#x3c7;, P < .001) and the presence of a linear foreign body (&#x3c7;, P = .02253). No associations were detected between dogs' age, sex, weight, surgery time, indication for surgical intervention, surgery location in the gastrointestinal tract, or surgeon experience and incisional dehiscence. CONCLUSION: Skin staplers provide safe and effective closure of gastrotomies, enterotomies, and colonotomies in dogs. This method is reliable, efficient, and affordable in the hands of veterinary surgeons with varying skill levels.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29218712/