Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Risks and outcomes for dogs with breathing problems having airway
By Bianco, Zoe et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2020·Department of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Risk Factors and Outcomes in Dogs With Respiratory Disease Undergoing Diagnostic Airway Lavage.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 17 dogs with breathing problems underwent advanced diagnostic tests, including a CT scan and bronchoalveolar lavage (a procedure to collect fluid from the lungs), while under general anesthesia. The study found that while there were some temporary complications in 18% of the dogs, none of the complications were life-threatening, and there were no deaths directly linked to the procedures. The researchers also developed a new scoring system to help assess the severity of respiratory disease in dogs, which could improve future evaluations. Overall, the procedures were deemed safe for dogs with respiratory issues.
People also search for: dog breathing problems treatment · bronchoalveolar lavage in dogs · dog CT scan risks
Abstract
Advanced diagnostic testing is becoming increasingly important to accurately assess pulmonary parenchymal, airway, and pulmonary vascular diseases in dogs. Due to respiratory system compromise, diagnostic procedures performed under general anesthesia, including thoracic computed tomography (CT) and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), are thought to carry significant risk to dogs with respiratory disease. In lieu of performing these diagnostics, empirical medical therapy is often administered, potentially delaying appropriate therapy or providing unnecessary treatment. This study prospectively evaluated risk factors and outcomes for dogs with respiratory disease undergoing general anesthesia for thoracic CT and BAL. Arterial blood gas samples were taken pre- and post-BAL to evaluate pulmonary gas exchange. Pre-BAL arterial partial pressure of oxygen-to-fractional inspired oxygen ratio was used to stratify dogs into groups of mild or moderate to severe disease severity. A novel thoracic CT disease severity scoring system was used to independently stratify dogs into mild or moderate to severe groups. Statistical comparisons between groups were made for signalment, body weight, temperature, pulse, respiratory rate, WBC count, ventilator-acquired pulmonary mechanics (specific compliance and resistance), change in arterial partial pressure of oxygen post-BAL, and outcomes. Seventeen dogs were prospectively enrolled. A comparatively lower heart rate at presentation was the only potential marker of increased disease severity identified when stratified by CT severity score. Arterial partial pressure of oxygen did not significantly decrease post-BAL regardless of disease severity or stratification method. The CT scoring system significantly correlated with the pre-BAL arterial partial pressure of oxygen-to-fractional inspired oxygen ratio. Incidence of post-procedural complications was 18%, with all complications being transient. Mortality as a direct complication of diagnostics was 0%. When considering euthanasia secondary to severity of the underlying disease and poor prognosis or death due to unrelated disease, mortality was 18%. In dogs with respiratory disease undergoing advanced diagnostic procedures, the overall incidence of post-procedural morbidity was low with no mortality directly attributed to the procedures. A novel CT disease severity scoring system was utilized and shows promise as a tool for evaluation of disease severity in this patient population when compared to arterial blood gas analysis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32363200/