Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Antibiotic choices and complications after ear surgery in dogs
By Folk, Christian A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2022·College of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effect of empirical versus definitive antimicrobial selection on postoperative complications in dogs and cats undergoing total ear canal ablation with lateral bulla osteotomy: 120 cases (2009-2019).
Plain-English summary
A group of 120 dogs and cats underwent a surgery called total ear canal ablation with lateral bulla osteotomy (TECA-LBO) to treat ear problems. After the surgery, it was found that giving antibiotics within the first month helped reduce the chances of infection-related complications significantly. In fact, pets who received antibiotics were much less likely to need additional surgeries due to infections. However, longer use of antibiotics was linked to more complications, so careful management is important. Overall, timely antibiotic treatment can lead to better recovery outcomes after this type of ear surgery.
People also search for: dog ear surgery infection · cat ear surgery antibiotics · TECA-LBO recovery complications
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate dogs and cats undergoing total ear canal ablation with lateral bulla osteotomy (TECA-LBO), document antimicrobial choices, and determine relationships associated with infection-related and neurologic postoperative complications. ANIMALS: 107 client-owned dogs and 13 client-owned cats that underwent TECA-LBO. PROCEDURES: A retrospective analysis of medicals records of dogs and cats with TECA-LBO from 2 veterinary hospitals with postoperative data for at least 6 months was performed. All information associated with the TECA-LBO surgery including follow-up was recorded. Logistic regression analyses were performed and corrected using a false discovery rate to identify significance between antimicrobial administration and other perioperative variables and the outcomes of short- and long-term neurologic and infection-related complications, need for revision surgery, and euthanasia due to recurrence of infection-related signs. RESULTS: Intraoperative cultures were performed in 111 animals, and 95 (85.5%) had bacterial growth, with Staphylococcus spp most commonly isolated. Revision surgeries due to infection-related signs occurred in 13 of 120 (10.8%) patients. If intraoperative bacterial cultures were positive and antimicrobials were administered within 1 month of surgery, patients were 85.8% less likely to exhibit infection-related complications, whereas patients not administered antimicrobials were 10.3 times as likely to require a revision surgery. Longer durations of postoperative antimicrobial administration were associated with revision surgery and euthanasia due to infection-related signs. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Administration of systemic antimicrobials within the first postoperative month may be necessary to prevent complications when intraoperative cultures exhibit bacterial growth and plays a role in the successful outcome of TECA-LBO.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35333738/