Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Long-term survival after surgery for ferret adrenal disease
By Swiderski, Jennifer K et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2008·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Long-term outcome of domestic ferrets treated surgically for hyperadrenocorticism: 130 cases (1995-2004).
- Species:
- rodent
Plain-English summary
A group of 130 domestic ferrets with adrenal gland tumors (hyperadrenocorticism) underwent surgery to treat their condition. Most ferrets had a great chance of recovery, with 98% surviving at least one year after surgery and 88% surviving for two years. The study found that the type of surgery performed and the specific adrenal gland affected did not significantly impact survival rates. Even when complete removal of the tumor wasn't possible, the ferrets still had a good long-term outcome with the right surgical approach.
People also search for: ferret adrenal gland surgery recovery · hyperadrenocorticism in ferrets · ferret surgery survival rate
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the long-term survival rate and factors that affect survival time of domestic ferrets treated surgically for hyperadrenocorticism. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case series. ANIMALS: 130 ferrets with hyperadrenocorticism that were treated surgically. PROCEDURES: Medical records of ferrets surgically treated for hyperadrenocorticism were reviewed. Data recorded included signalment, duration of clinical signs prior to hospital admission, CBC values, serum biochemical analysis results, anesthetic time, surgical time, concurrent diseases, adrenal gland affected (right, left, or both [bilateral]), histopathologic diagnosis, surgical procedure, caudal vena caval involvement (yes or no), postoperative melena (yes or no), days in hospital after surgery, and whether clinical signs of hyperadrenocorticism developed after surgery. RESULTS: 130 ferrets were entered in the study (11 of 130 ferrets were admitted and underwent surgery twice). The 1- and 2-year survival rates were 98% and 88%, respectively. A 50% survival rate was never reached. Combined partial adrenal gland resection with cryosurgery had a significantly negative effect on survival time. No other risk factors were identified. Survival time was not significantly affected by either histopathologic diagnosis or specific affected adrenal gland (right, left, or bilateral). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Ferrets with adrenal gland masses that were treated surgically had a good prognosis. Survival time of ferrets with hyperadrenocorticism undergoing surgery was not affected by the histologic characteristic of the tumor, the adrenal glands affected (right, left, or bilateral), or complete versus partial adrenal gland resection. Debulking was a sufficient surgical technique to allow a favorable long-term outcome when complete excision was not possible.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18447778/