Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Wound healing problems after wide surgery for cat injection site
By Cantatore, Matteo et al.Ā·Published in Veterinary surgery : VSĀ·2014Ā·Dipartimento di Scienze Veterinarie e Sanità, ItalyĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Factors influencing wound healing complications after wide excision of injection site sarcomas of the trunk of cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 49 cats with injection site sarcomas (a type of cancer) on their trunks underwent surgery to remove the tumors. The study found that longer surgery times were linked to a higher risk of complications with healing after the operation. Factors like the size of the tumor and the method used to close the wound also played a role, but the length of the surgery was the most significant predictor of healing issues. Understanding these factors can help veterinarians plan surgeries more effectively to minimize complications.
People also search for: cat injection site sarcoma surgery complications Ā· cat wound healing issues after surgery Ā· factors affecting cat surgery recovery
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Wide surgery is the mainstay of the multimodal treatment of injection site sarcomas (ISS) in cats. The aim of the study was to analyze potential factors influencing the development of wound healing complications (WHC) in cats undergoing wide excision of ISS. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case series. ANIMALS: Forty-nine cats with ISS located on the trunk underwent wide excision after contrast-enhanced computed tomography planning. METHODS: The prognostic effect of covariates (sex, age, weight, body condition score (BCS), site, clinical dimension (CD), computed tomographic dimension (CTD), histotype, duration of surgery, surgical margin status, local anesthesia) on total, major and minor WHC was evaluated by univariate and bivariate analysis. Cox model was used for total WHC and Fine and Gray model was used for major and minor WHC. The relationship between duration of surgery and clinical and imaging variables was evaluated. RESULTS: The main factor associated to the risk of total and major WHC was surgical time. Based on univariate analysis, pattern of reconstruction, CDT, CD, weight, and BCS were significant prognostic factors for major WHC, but this was not confirmed when adjusted for other clinical variables in bivariate analysis. The duration of surgery was influenced by excision pattern and tumor CTD width. CONCLUSIONS: An increased duration of surgery as the consequence of complex surgical procedures represented the best predictor for the development of WHC.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24861659/