Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with chylothorax and lung collapse treated successfully
By Rehbein, Sina et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2019·Clinic for Small Animals, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Successful Treatment of Pneumothorax in a Dog With Sterile Pleural Fibrosis Caused by Chylothorax.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 2-year-old crossbreed dog was brought in with trouble breathing, exercise intolerance, and gagging. X-rays showed a severe buildup of fluid in the chest, which was identified as chylous (fatty) fluid causing lung problems. After surgery to remove part of the lung and treat the fluid buildup, the dog's condition improved significantly. Within a week, the remaining lung lobes expanded to about 80%, and after 10 days, the dog was sent home. Fifteen months later, follow-up X-rays showed the lungs had fully expanded, and the dog was doing well with only mild residual issues.
People also search for: dog breathing problems · chylothorax treatment in dogs · dog lung surgery recovery
Abstract
A 2-year-old, 12 kg, intact male crossbreed dog was presented with respiratory distress, exercise intolerance, and gagging. Plain thoracic radiographs revealed severe pleural effusion. Although bilateral needle thoracocentesis and chest tube placement were performed, no re-expansion of the lung lobes occurred. Pleural effusion was of chylous quality and led to lung entrapment. Computer tomography revealed a highly atrophic and atelectatic right middle lung lobe. The remaining lung lobes were only expanded to ~40%. Visceral pleura and pericardium showed a heterogeneous thickening consistent with pleural fibrosis. Partial pericardiectomy with resection of the middle lung lobe through a right lateral thoracotomy was performed. Ligation of the thoracic duct and ablation of the cisterna chyli was achieved through a single paracostal approach. Histopathology revealed chronic-active proliferative beginning granulomatous pleuritis, fibrotic pericarditis, and partial coagulative necrosis with incomplete granulomatous sequestration in the resected middle lung lobe. Chylothorax resolved after surgical intervention. Active pleural effusion resolved, and lung entrapment changed to trapped lung disease. The remaining lung lobes re-expanded to ~80% over the following 6 days. The dog was discharged 10 days later. Mild to moderate pleural effusion of non-chylic quality was present during the following 4 months. Meloxicam was administered for 4 months because of its anti-fibrotic and anti-inflammatory properties. Fifteen months later, thoracic radiographs revealed full radiologic expansion of the lungs with persistent mild pleural fibrosis. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first case report of pneumothorax due pleural fibrosis caused by chylothorax in a dog with an excellent clinical outcome.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31508433/