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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Early ultrasound to detect bowel leaks after intestinal surgery

By Rafael, Paul et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2025·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of early and systematic ultrasound examination to determine postoperative dehiscence after small intestinal surgery (114 cases in dogs and cats).

Stomach & digestion

Plain-English summary

A group of 83 dogs and 31 cats underwent small intestinal surgery, and some were monitored with ultrasound to check for potential complications like bowel dehiscence (where the surgical site opens up). In dogs, ultrasound detected signs of dehiscence in 7 cases, which were confirmed during follow-up surgeries. The good news is that most pets (83%) survived the second surgery, and those that needed it typically stayed in the hospital for about 2 days. This study suggests that using ultrasound shortly after surgery can help catch issues early, improving outcomes for pets.

People also search for: dog intestinal surgery recovery · cat surgery complications · ultrasound for dog bowel problems · signs of intestinal leakage in dogs · dog surgery follow-up care

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the feasibility and reliability of early ultrasound diagnosis for postsurgical bowel dehiscence and find the most reliable ultrasound criteria for dehiscence identification. Additionally, to determine the impact of early ultrasound detection of leakage in terms of survival and duration of hospitalization. Finally, to assess the need for systematized screening or checkup of the population at risk of dehiscence only. ANIMALS: 31 cats and 83 dogs. METHODS: A retrospective, records-based study was performed on 83 dogs and 31 cats (114 total) undergoing small intestinal surgery. Epidemiologic data, clinical signs, surgical procedures, pre- and postoperative ultrasound findings at 48 to 96 hours, hospitalization duration, complications, and general outcomes were recorded. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to identify ultrasound findings associated with dehiscence. RESULTS: Dehiscence was suspected by ultrasound for 0 of 31 cats and 7 of 83 dogs (2 of 49 for enterotomy and 5 of 34 for enterectomy). Every suspected dehiscence was confirmed during revision surgery except one enterectomy revision, which was declined by the owner. Neither this case nor those without ultrasound evidence of dehiscence developed clinical signs of intestinal leakage. Direct visibility of wall discontinuity, presence of gas bubbles, and liquid in vicinity of the intestinal surgical site were statistically associated with early dehiscence. Survival rate after the second surgery was 83%. Median hospitalization time after the second surgery for dehiscence was 2 days (minimum, 2 days; maximum, 4 days). CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Postoperative ultrasound examination between 48 and 96 hours after intestinal surgery allows early and sensitive detection of intestinal dehiscence. Survival rate after revision surgery was significantly higher than that associated with septic peritonitis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39366412/