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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Medical and diet treatment for intestinal lymphangitis in dogs

By Crisonà, M et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2025·Department of Veterinary Medical Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Successful clinical management of canine intestinal lipogranulomatous lymphangitis through exclusive medical and nutritional treatment: four cases (2018-2023).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Four dogs with intestinal lipogranulomatous lymphangitis, a rare condition causing thickening of the intestinal walls, were treated successfully without surgery. Their symptoms included diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. The dogs were put on a special low-fat or hydrolyzed diet along with immunosuppressive medications. Remarkably, all four dogs showed complete recovery within a month, and three of them had improvements in their ultrasound results over the following months.

People also search for: dog diarrhea and vomiting treatment · intestinal lymphangitis in dogs · low-fat diet for dogs with intestinal issues

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe clinical, ultrasonographic, pathological features and response to medical therapy of four dogs with intestinal lipogranulomatous lymphangitis. METHODS: Retrospective review of medical records of dogs with an ultrasonographic evidence of focal or multifocal intestinal wall thickening and a histological diagnosis of lipogranulomatous lymphangitis. Only dogs that did not undergo surgical resection of the lesions were included. The clinical response to medical treatment, consisting of low-fat or hydrolysed diet along with immunosuppressive agents was assessed; clinicopathological and ultrasonographic abnormalities were re-evaluated over time, with a median follow-up period of 16.5 months. RESULTS: Four dogs met the inclusion criteria. The main historical complaints were diarrhoea (three of four dogs), vomiting (three of four dogs) and abdominal pain (two of four dogs). Clinicopathological abnormalities comprised hypoproteinaemia, hypoalbuminaemia and mild/moderate increase in C-reactive protein levels (three of four dogs). Abdominal ultrasound revealed focal (two of four dogs) or multifocal (two of four dogs) intestinal wall thickening involving distal jejunum, ileum and ileocolic junction. Histopathology of full thickness intestinal biopsies revealed granulomatous enteritis and lymphangitis with lymphangiectasia. Nutritional and medical treatment allowed complete clinical remission in all four dogs within a month of therapy. Improvement of ultrasound abnormalities was noted in three of the four dogs over a 3- to 12-month period. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Intestinal lipogranulomatous lymphangitis is a rare form of canine chronic enteropathy characterised by focal or multifocal intestinal lesions due to the presence of transmural intestinal lipogranulomas. This is the first case series describing successful management of intestinal lipogranulomatous lymphangitis through medical treatment alone.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39238317/