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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog develops tension pneumothorax after feeding tube misplacement

By Giordano, P et al.·Published in Australian veterinary journal·2014·UCD Veterinary Hospital·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Tension pneumothorax secondary to nasojejunal feeding tube misplacement in a mechanically ventilated dog.

Species:
dog
Breathing & coughDogs

Plain-English summary

An 11-year-old female terrier-cross developed serious breathing problems after a feeding tube was incorrectly placed during surgery. After several attempts to insert the tube, it was finally placed successfully, but when the previous tube was removed, the dog suffered from a tension pneumothorax, which is a life-threatening condition where air gets trapped in the chest cavity. The dog showed signs of severe respiratory distress and low oxygen levels. Immediate treatment involved removing the trapped air and placing drainage tubes, which significantly improved her breathing. The following day, surgery revealed and repaired two lung lesions caused by the tube misplacement.

People also search for: dog breathing problems after surgery · tension pneumothorax treatment in dogs · feeding tube complications in dogs

Abstract

CASE REPORT: An 11-year-old female terrier-cross underwent general anaesthesia and mechanical ventilation for insulinoma resection. Following tumour removal, three consecutive but unsuccessful attempts were made to place a wire-guided nasojejunal feeding tube (NJFT), using both nostrils, with one tube eventually left in situ in the right nostril. A final successful attempt using a smaller NJFT was made via the left nostril. On withdrawal of the previously, unsuccessfully placed NJFT, the dog developed an acute tension pneumothorax. Severe cardiorespiratory dysfunction ensued, including decreasing arterial haemoglobin O2 saturation, increasing end-tidal CO2, hypotension and tachycardia. Immediate thoracocentesis with air evacuation from the pleural cavity followed by continuous air drainage through bilateral thoracostomy tubes produced marked improvement of cardiorespiratory function. During exploratory thoracotomy performed 1 day later, two lung lesions were identified and over sewn, one in the right middle lobe and the other in the accessory lobe. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first case report to describe in an anaesthetised and mechanically ventilated dog the occurrence and management of a tension pneumothorax as a life-threatening complication secondary to parenchymal injury after NJFT misplacement into the tracheobronchial tree. It illustrates that presence of a cuffed endotracheal tube does not protect against passing a NJFT into the bronchial system.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25256844/