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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Survival factors after gallbladder surgery in 516 dogs

By Galley, Monty et al.·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2022·MedVet New Orleans, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Factors affecting survival in 516 dogs that underwent cholecystectomy for the treatment of gallbladder mucocele.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 516 dogs, mostly around 11 years old, underwent surgery to remove their gallbladders due to a condition called gallbladder mucocele, which can be very serious. Unfortunately, about 17% of these dogs died within two weeks after surgery, especially if they had a ruptured gallbladder or a positive infection test. Dogs with these complications were significantly more likely to face a poor outcome. The study suggests that imaging and infection testing before surgery, along with antibiotics, could help improve survival rates in these cases.

People also search for: dog gallbladder surgery recovery · gallbladder mucocele symptoms in dogs · dog surgery complications · gallbladder rupture in dogs · dog infection after surgery

Abstract

Gallbladder mucocele (GBM) is a commonly diagnosed disease process in dogs that is associated with high morbidity and mortality if not recognized and appropriately managed. Although the exact mechanism of this disease process is not completely understood, previous studies in smaller populations of dogs have identified multiple factors that predispose to the development of GBM and affect survival. The purpose of this cross-sectional, retrospective study was to evaluate the effects of age, breed category, sex, preoperative antibiotic administration, gallbladder rupture, and a positive biliary culture in dogs that had a cholecystectomy performed for the treatment of GBM. The age (median: 11 years) and percentage of dogs that died within 14 days of cholecystectomy (16.7%) are similar to what have been reported in other studies. Gallbladder rupture and a positive biliary culture occurred in 20.4% and 12.5% of dogs, respectively. Dogs with a gallbladder rupture and positive biliary culture were 2.74 and 3.10 times more likely to die within 14 days of cholecystectomy, respectively. This contradicts a recent study that failed to find a significant association between survival and biliary culture result. Interestingly, younger age was associated with an increased occurrence of gallbladder rupture in that population. Because of the potential effect of gallbladder rupture and a biliary tract infection, abdominal imaging, biliary culture, and empirical preoperative antimicrobial therapy are recommended in dogs undergoing cholecystectomy for the treatment of GBM.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34975169/