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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Outcomes of skin flap surgery in dogs and cats 2007-2020

By Forster, K et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2022·North Downs Specialist Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Outcome of caudal superficial epigastric axial pattern flaps in dogs and cats: 70 cases (2007-2020).

Plain-English summary

A review of 70 dogs and cats that underwent a specific type of skin flap surgery showed that while many pets experienced complications, most had good outcomes. In dogs, about 67% had some issues after the surgery, with the most common problems being wound dehiscence (where the wound opens), necrosis (tissue death), and infections. For cats, 53% faced complications, but they had a slightly better healing rate overall. Despite these challenges, 77% of dogs and 79% of cats healed well after the procedure, indicating that this surgical technique can be effective, though it carries risks.

People also search for: dog skin flap surgery complications · cat surgery recovery · why is my dog’s wound not healing · pet surgery infection signs

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe the outcome and complications associated with the use of caudal superficial epigastric axial pattern flaps in dogs and cats. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Multicentre retrospective review and descriptive study of clinical records of dogs and cats having undergone caudal superficial epigastric axial pattern flaps between 2007 and 2020. Data retrieved included signalment, aetiology of surgical defect, tumour type, presence/absence of clean surgical margins, presence/absence of post-operative wound infection, use of peri- and post-operative antibiotics, duration of anaesthesia, duration of surgery, presence and duration of hypothermia, presence and duration of hypotension, presence/absence of post-operative surgical drain and length of caudal superficial epigastric axial pattern flap. The incidence of complications and outcomes were documented. RESULTS: Seventy cases met the inclusion criteria; 51 dogs and 19 cats. In dogs, 67% of cases developed complications (59% minor, 8% major) and 33% had uneventful wound healing. In cats, 53% of cases developed complications, (47% minor, 5% major) and 47% had uneventful wound healing. In dogs, the percentage of cases experiencing dehiscence, necrosis, seroma, oedema and post-operative infection was 31%, 29%, 26%, 26% and 16% respectively. In cats, this was 26%, 16%, 11%, 0% and 5% respectively. A good overall outcome was seen in 77% of dogs and 79% of cats. A poor overall outcome was seen in 4% of dogs and 0% of cats. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Caudal superficial epigastric axial pattern flaps are traditionally thought more robust than other flaps, yet complication rates remain high, despite a high overall success rate.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34937131/