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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Mediastinectomy surgery for chronic pleural disease in dogs

By Trinterud, T et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2014·Dick White Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Mediastinectomy for management of chronic pyogranulomatous pleural disease in dogs.

Species:
dog
Canine pyometraBreathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

Twelve dogs suffering from chronic breathing problems due to a condition called pyogranulomatous pleural disease (which involves inflammation and infection in the pleura around the lungs) were treated with a surgical procedure called mediastinectomy to remove the affected tissue. After the surgery, most dogs showed significant improvement, with 11 out of 12 owners reporting their pets were symptom-free during follow-up. While a couple of dogs experienced complications like pneumothorax (air in the chest) after surgery, the overall outcome was positive, with a high success rate and few major issues. This surgery proved to be an effective solution for dogs that did not respond to medical treatments.

People also search for: dog breathing problems treatment · chronic pleural disease in dogs · mediastinectomy for dogs · dog surgery recovery time

Abstract

The medical records of 12 dogs with chronic pyogranulomatous pleural disease unresponsive to medical management were reviewed retrospectively. Resection of the mediastinal pleura (mediastinectomy) was performed through a median sternotomy to remove all diseased and surgically accessible mediastinal pleural tissue. Dogs were re-examined two weeks postoperatively, and long-term outcome was evaluated by contacting owners by phone. Twelve dogs underwent mediastinectomy; additional surgeries included subtotal pericardiectomy (8), lung lobectomy (4) and partial diaphragmatic resection (2). Histology of resected tissue consistently revealed neutrophilic, pyogranulomatous cellulitis/serositis. Foreign material was evident in the mediastinal tissue of five dogs and microorganisms were recovered from three dogs. Two dogs developed pneumothorax immediately postoperatively; one dog developed haemothorax one month postoperatively and was euthanased. Median follow-up time was eight months (range: 6-43 months); eleven dogs were alive and considered to be symptom-free by their owners. Mediastinectomy resulted in complete resolution of symptoms in most dogs (92 per cent) and was associated with a low incidence of major complications. The results of this study indicated that mediastinectomy results in favourable outcome for dogs with chronic pleural pyogranulomatous pleural disease unresponsive to medical management.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24686857/