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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ovarian torsion as a cause of colic in a neonatal foal.

Journal:
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
Year:
1998
Authors:
Valk, N et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences · United States
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A 1-week-old Morgan filly was brought in because she was showing signs of severe belly pain for about 7 hours. When the vets examined her, everything seemed normal, but an X-ray showed that her small intestine was slightly swollen. After watching her for a while and not finding anything wrong with her stomach, the vets decided to do surgery. They discovered that her left ovary had twisted around itself, cutting off its blood supply, which caused the pain. They removed the damaged ovary, and after a good recovery, the filly went home 5 days later. Two years later, she was doing well and appeared completely healthy. This case suggests that ovarian torsion should be considered when young female horses show sudden belly pain, especially if other tests don’t show any issues.

Abstract

A 1-week-old Morgan filly was evaluated because of acute signs of abdominal pain of 7 hours' duration. On admission, physical examination findings were unremarkable; however, radiography of the abdomen revealed slight distention of the small intestine. Signs of abdominal discomfort were detected during several hours of observation. Abnormalities were not evident during gastroscopic evaluation. Therefore, exploratory laparotomy was performed. The only abnormal finding was infarction of the left ovary secondary to a 720 degrees torsion of the mesovarium. The vascular pedicle was ligated and the ovary was removed. Recovery from anesthesia and surgery was satisfactory, and the foal was discharged from the hospital 5 days after surgery. Two years later, it appeared to be clinically normal. Review of the recent veterinary literature failed to find reports of ovarian torsion as a cause of signs of abdominal pain in horses. Ovarian torsion should be considered as a differential diagnosis in fillies with acute signs of abdominal pain, especially when laparotomy fails to reveal abnormalities associated with the gastrointestinal tract.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9828943/