Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with liver brain disease improved by plasma exchange treatment
By C. Culler et al.·Published in Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care·2020·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Successful management of clinical signs associated with hepatic encephalopathy with manual therapeutic plasma exchange in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 9-year-old female Dachshund was brought in for severe confusion and other symptoms related to hepatic encephalopathy (HE), which was caused by a portosystemic shunt. Despite trying various medications, her condition didn't improve, so the vet performed a manual therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) to help reduce her high ammonia levels. After the treatment, her ammonia levels dropped significantly, and she showed quick improvement in her symptoms. Five days later, she had surgery to correct the shunt and recovered well, with no neurological issues, and was doing great 100 days after the surgery.
People also search for: Dachshund hepatic encephalopathy treatment · dog high ammonia levels · therapeutic plasma exchange for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To describe the use of manual therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) to manage hepatic encephalopathy (HE) in a dog. CASE SUMMARY A 9-year-old neutered female Dachshund presented for HE secondary to a previously diagnosed portosystemic shunt. The hyperammonemia and severe clinical signs of HE persisted despite extensive medical management. Therapeutic plasma exchange was performed for stabilization prior to surgical shunt ligation. A total of 1 plasma volume was processed during a single manual TPE session. The ammonia immediately prior to TPE was 235 μmol/L (reference interval, 10-30 μmol/L) and decreased to 117 μmol/L by the end of the session. The dog showed significant improvement in clinical signs shortly after the session and remained stable thereafter. Shunt ligation was performed 5 days later with no complications observed with TPE or postoperatively. The dog was discharged 3 days after surgery with no neurological signs and was doing well 100 days after surgery. NEW OR UNIQUE INFORMATION PROVIDED To the authors' knowledge, this is the first published report of manual TPE to manage HE in veterinary medicine. Therapeutic plasma exchange should be further investigated as a possible strategy to manage clinical signs of HE in patients that are refractory to medical management. Achieving this with manual TPE may be considered in patients that are too small for conventional TPE due to extracorporeal volume or in situations where conventional TPE is not available.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/32077185