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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How helpful is ultrasound for dogs with diarrhea

By Mapletoft, E K et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2018·Department of Clinical Science and Services, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: How useful is abdominal ultrasonography in dogs with diarrhoea?

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with diarrhea underwent abdominal ultrasound to help diagnose their condition. Out of 269 dogs, the ultrasound showed no issues in 65 of them, while others had varying results that led to different follow-up tests. Only a few dogs had clear diagnoses from the ultrasound alone, such as a portosystemic shunt or a foreign body. Overall, the ultrasound was found to be helpful in some cases but not in many others, suggesting that vets should think carefully before using it routinely for dogs with diarrhea.

People also search for: dog diarrhea ultrasound · abdominal ultrasound for dogs · dog digestive problems diagnosis

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the utility of abdominal ultrasonography in the diagnostic work-up of dogs with diarrhoea. METHODS: Retrospective cross-sectional study based on a referral population of dogs with diarrhoea. Associations between the clinical signs, use of abdominal ultrasonography, results of abdominal ultrasonography and subsequent work-up were examined. The utility of abdominal ultrasonography was scored as high, moderate, none or counterproductive based on review of medical records. RESULTS: Medical records of 269 dogs were reviewed, of which 149 (55%) had abdominal ultrasonography. The most frequent result was no ultrasonographic abnormalities affecting the intestine in 65 (44%) dogs. Ultrasonography results were associated with subsequent work-up as follows: (1) no detected abnormalities and dietary trial; (2) focal thickening of the intestinal wall, loss of intestinal wall layers or enlarged abdominal lymph nodes and ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspirates; (3) diffuse thickening of the intestinal wall or hyperechoic striations in the small intestinal mucosa and endoscopy; and (4) small intestinal foreign body and coeliotomy. Abdominal ultrasonography was considered to be diagnostic without further testing in only four (3%) dogs: two had a portosystemic shunt identified ultrasonographically, one had a linear foreign body and one had a perforated pyloric ulcer. Abdominal ultrasonography had moderate utility in 56 (38%) dogs and no utility in 79 (53%) dogs. Abdominal ultrasonography was considered counterproductive in 10 (7%) dogs because results were either falsely negative or falsely positive. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: These results should prompt clinicians to reconsider routine use of abdominal ultrasonography in dogs with diarrhoea.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29105088/