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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Removing stuck catheters from blood vessels in dogs, a goat

By Culp, William T N et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2008·Department of Clinical Studies-Philadelphia, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Percutaneous endovascular retrieval of an intravascular foreign body in five dogs, a goat, and a horse.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of five dogs, a goat, and a horse had foreign objects, mostly IV catheters, stuck in their blood vessels. The veterinarians used a minimally invasive technique to safely remove these foreign bodies without causing long-term issues. While one dog had to be euthanized later due to another health problem and another showed neurological signs from a brain mass, the rest of the animals recovered well and were healthy during follow-ups lasting up to 57 months. This procedure proved to be effective and safe for retrieving foreign objects from the bloodstream.

People also search for: dog foreign body removal · IV catheter complications in dogs · treatment for dog with catheter in blood vessel

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION-5 Dogs, 1 goat, and 1 horse underwent percutaneous endovascular retrieval of intravascular foreign bodies between 2002 and 2007. CLINICAL FINDINGS-Foreign bodies were IV catheters in 4 dogs, the horse, and the goat and a piece of a balloon valvuloplasty catheter in 1 dog. Location of the foreign bodies included the main pulmonary artery (1 dog), a branch of a pulmonary artery (4 dogs), the right ventricle (the goat), and a jugular vein (the horse). TREATMENT AND OUTCOME-The procedure of percutaneous endovascular retrieval of the foreign body was easy to perform in all instances. One dog was euthanized 41 days after retrieval because of worsening of another disease process, and 1 dog had abnormal neurologic signs secondary to a brain mass. All other animals were clinically normal during the follow-up period (follow-up duration, 3 to 57 months). None of the animals developed long-term complications secondary to the foreign body retrieval procedure. CLINICAL RELEVANCE-Intravascular foreign bodies that result from catheters or devices used during minimally invasive techniques are rare but may cause substantial morbidity. Percutaneous endovascular retrieval of intravascular foreign bodies was easily and safely performed in the 7 animals reported here. Use of percutaneous endovascular retrieval techniques should be considered for treatment of animals with intravascular foreign bodies because morbidity can be substantially decreased; however, proper selection of patients for the procedure is necessary.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18598155/