Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Hemoclipping for chronic stomach ulcers in dogs and healing results
By Jensen, Dennis M & Machicado, Gustavo A·Published in Gastrointestinal endoscopy·2009·and David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Hemoclipping of chronic canine ulcers: a randomized, prospective study of initial deployment success, clip retention rates, and ulcer healing.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of seven adult dogs with chronic stomach ulcers were treated using different types of hemoclips to see which worked best for healing. The dogs received daily medication to reduce stomach acid and had weekly check-ups to monitor their ulcers. The study found that one type of clip, called the Resolution Clip, was the most effective, staying in place longer than the others and not delaying the healing process. All treatments were safe, and the dogs did not experience any serious side effects.
People also search for: dog stomach ulcer treatment · hemoclip for dog ulcers · chronic gastric ulcers in dogs · dog ulcer healing time
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several different hemoclips are marketed for endoscopic hemostasis of nonvariceal upper GI (UGI) bleeding. No previous reports have compared success rates of clip deployment onto bases of chronic gastric ulcers (GUs), clip retention rates, or their influence on ulcer healing. OBJECTIVES: For the treatment of chronic GUs, to compare 3 different hemoclips with multipolar electrocoagulation (MPEC) and control. DESIGN: Randomized, controlled study. SUBJECTS: Seven adult dogs with prehepatic portal hypertension had GUs created by rubber band ligation. Animals received oral proton pump inhibitors daily and underwent weekly endoscopies to quantitate clip retention and ulcer healing. INTERVENTIONS: One week after banding, 10 chronic ulcers were randomized in pairs to control (no endoscopic treatment), MPEC, or different hemoclips (QuickClip2 [QC], TriClip [TC], or Resolution Clip [RC]). MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Times and success of hemoclip deployment, clip retention rates, and ulcer healing rates on weekly endoscopies. RESULTS: Success rates of clip deployment were 100% for the RC, 93.1% for the TC, and 83.3% for the QC. Clip retention rates were significantly higher with the RC than the QC or TC at 1 to 3 weeks. Retained clips did not delay GU healing compared with MPEC or control. CONCLUSIONS: Hemoclipping time was similar with all 3 clips; the RC was retained significantly longer than the QC or TC, hemoclips did not delay ulcer healing compared with control or MPEC, and all 3 hemoclips were safe and no complications such as bleeding and weight loss were noted.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19640519/