Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with rare small intestine duplication causing anorexia
By T. Hwang et al.·2017·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Non-communicating small intestinal duplication in a dog: a case report
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 9-year-old spayed female Yorkshire terrier was brought in for not eating and having diarrhea. During the exam, the vet found signs of anemia and some abnormalities in her blood tests. An ultrasound revealed a rare condition where part of her intestine was duplicated, which can happen due to developmental issues. Unfortunately, the dog did not survive the surgery to remove the affected part of her intestine. This case highlights a very rare intestinal issue that can occur in dogs, often without other visible problems.
People also search for: dog diarrhea treatment · Yorkshire terrier not eating · dog intestinal surgery complications
Abstract
Enteric duplication is rare in dogs. Here, we report the rarest form of duplication in which two segments are parallel and share a wall for most of their lengths. A nine-year-old spayed female Yorkshire terrier was referred to the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital at Gyeongsang National University due to anorexia and diarrhoea. Physical examination, haematological examination, radiography, and ultrasonography were performed. On physical examination, dry, pale mucous membrane was identified. Moderate anaemia with decreased packed cell volume was detected in complete blood count. Serum urea nitrogen and creatinine levels were mildly increased. Radiographic images revealed no significant findings. On ultrasonographic examination, a multi-layered appearance of a focal small intestinal segment was identified in the left mid abdomen. Following the lesion, it was divided into two small intestinal segments. Based on imaging findings, intussusceptions or enteric duplication were suspected. To resect the abnormal small intestinal segment, enterectomy was performed. Follow-up was not performed because the patient expired during the postoperative recovery time. The histopathological diagnosis was non-communicating small intestinal duplication. Non-communicating intestinal duplication is related to embryologic abnormalities and is usually concurrent with other anomalies such as vertebral malformations and urogenital duplications. However, this case had no other anomalies associated with the malformation of the intestine.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/7ae4b4295fc5aac29f25abc314e4c024f360488b