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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Transversus abdominis muscle as a gastric or intestinal on-lay flap in two dogs and one cat.

Journal:
The Journal of small animal practice
Year:
2021
Authors:
Simpson, M & Hall, J L
Affiliation:
Hospital for Small Animals · United Kingdom

Plain-English summary

This study looked at using a piece of muscle from the abdomen to help support the intestines in three pets: two dogs and one cat. In the first case, a dog had a part of its intestine that had folded in on itself, and the muscle flap was used to support it after surgery. In the second case, a cat had a serious stomach issue where the stomach twisted and needed support after surgery. The third case involved a dog that had a stomach ulcer and required repair. All three pets recovered well and went home within four days, with no complications reported later on. This new technique might be a helpful option for supporting the intestines when traditional methods aren't possible.

Abstract

Historically, omentalisation and serosal patching have been used to augment gastrointestinal wall defects or incisions where gastrointestinal viability is of concern. This report describes the novel use of a transversus abdominis muscle on-lay flap to augment and provide support to compromised intestine in three cases. The muscle flap was used to support: the ileum following reduction of an intussusception in a dog (case 1), the gastric wall following gastric strangulation, dilation and volvulus in a diaphragmatic rupture in a cat (case 2) and the jejunum following enterotomy and full-thickness ulcer resection with primary repair in a dog (case 3). All animals were discharged within 4 days postoperatively with no short- or long-term complications reported by either the referring veterinary surgeons on routine postoperative examination or on telephone follow-up with the owners (case 1: 10 months, case 2: 30 months, case 3: 6 weeks). The creation of a flap of the transversus abdominis muscle may provide a useful alternative or adjunct to previously described techniques for supporting the gastrointestinal tract when gastrointestinal tissue viability is questionable or resection is not feasible. Further prospective clinical evaluation studies would be indicated to determine whether the muscle flap remains viable or compare whether this technique should be recommended over conventional methods.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33599994/