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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Blood clotting status in dogs before spleen tumor surgery

By McPhetridge, Jourdan B et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Pre-operative Hemostatic Status in Dogs Undergoing Splenectomy for Splenic Masses.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 15 dogs undergoing surgery to remove splenic masses were tested for blood clotting issues before their operations. The tests showed that many of the dogs had signs of increased blood clotting, but none developed serious complications like portal system thrombosis after surgery. All the dogs survived for at least 30 days following the procedure. This suggests that while some dogs may have pre-existing clotting tendencies, it did not lead to post-surgery problems in this case.

People also search for: dog splenectomy recovery · dog blood clotting issues · splenic mass surgery complications

Abstract

Portal system thrombosis is a rare but potentially fatal complication of splenectomy in dogs. The mechanism behind development of post-operative portal system thrombosis is unclear but may include alterations of portal blood flow following surgery, acquired hypercoagulability and endothelial dysfunction. The aim of the study was to evaluate hemostatic biomarkers in hemodynamically stable (heart rate <130 beats/min, blood lactate < 2.5 mMol/L) and non-anemic (hematocrit >35%) dogs prior to splenectomy for splenic masses. Our hypothesis was that this population of stable dogs would have pre-existing laboratory evidence of hypercoagulability unrelated to shock, bleeding, anemia, or other pre-operative comorbidities. Pre-operatively, abdominal ultrasonography was performed and blood was collected for platelet enumeration, prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), kaolin-activated thromboelastography (TEG), fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor activity (vWF:Ag), antithrombin and thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT). Histopathological diagnosis and 30-day survival were recorded. None of the 15 enrolled dogs had pre-operative sonographic evidence of portal system thrombosis. Three of fifteen dogs were thrombocytopenic, three had thrombocytosis, three were hyperfibrinogenemic, one had low vWF:Ag, three had mild prolongations of PT and none had abnormal aPTT. Based on the TEG G value, 13/15 dogs were hypercoagulable (mean &#xb1; SD 13.5 &#xb1; 5.4 kd/s). Antithrombin deficiency was identified in 9/15 dogs (mean &#xb1; SD 68.7 &#xb1; 22.7%) with 5/9 having concurrently elevated TAT suggesting active thrombin generation. No dogs developed portal system thrombosis and all achieved 30-day survival. Pre-operative hypercoagulability was recognized commonly but its association with post-operative thrombosis remains undetermined.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35548053/