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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Excessive bleeding after surgery in retired racing Greyhounds

By Lara-García, A et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2008·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences and Veterinary Teaching Hospital, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Postoperative bleeding in retired racing greyhounds.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of retired racing greyhounds that underwent surgery experienced excessive bleeding afterward. About 26% of these dogs bled significantly 36-48 hours post-surgery, and tests showed that certain blood factors were abnormal in those that bled. Specifically, they had lower levels of antiplasmin and antithrombin, and higher levels of a specific blood factor related to clotting. The findings suggest that the bleeding wasn't due to a direct problem with blood clotting but might be linked to changes in how the body breaks down clots.

People also search for: greyhound surgery bleeding · retired racing greyhound recovery · excessive bleeding after dog surgery

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Some retired racing Greyhounds (RRG) that undergo surgery bleed excessively. HYPOTHESIS: Greyhounds that bleed excessively will have one or more preoperative hemostatic abnormalities that can be used to predict the risk and severity of postoperative bleeding. ANIMALS: Eighty-eight RRG undergoing ovariohysterectomy or castration. METHODS: All dogs were evaluated preoperatively with a physical exam, CBC, platelet count, OSPT, APTT, platelet function with PFA-100(a); fibrinogen, d-dimer, plasminogen (Plmg), antiplasmin (AP), antithrombin (AT), and vWF concentration (vWF:Ag); vWF collagen binding assay (vWF:CBA), and Factor XIII assay. Assays were repeated in the dogs that bled, and in an age- and sex-matched control group of RRG. RESULTS: Twenty-six percent of the dogs had bleeding 36-48 hours after surgery. AP (P <.0001) and AT concentration (P= .007) were significantly lower, and vWF:CBA (P= .0284) was higher preoperatively in the dogs with excessive hemorrhage. A lower platelet count (P= .001) and hematocrit (P= .002), shorter OSPT (P= .0002) and higher plasma fibrinogen (P <.0001), and AP (P= .001) concentration were detected at the time of bleeding compared with preoperative values in the dogs that bleed excessively. The same findings were observed postoperatively for the control group, except for the decrease in hematocrit. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: The results indicate that this excessive postoperative bleeding is not attributable to a primary or secondary hemostatic defect, but could result from altered fibrinolysis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18466249/