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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with sudden front leg blood clots after chest injury

By Fraga, Karla M et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001)·2026·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Traumatic Endocardial Rupture Causing Bilateral Forelimb Arterial Thromboembolism in a Dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A young male German Shepherd was brought to the vet after being hit by a car and showing signs of shock and breathing problems. Although he was treated for his injuries and seemed stable, he returned 10 days later with weakness in both front legs. Sadly, the vet discovered that he had a serious heart injury that caused blood clots, which blocked blood flow to his legs. Despite treatment efforts, the dog was euthanized due to the severity of his condition.

People also search for: dog weak front legs after car accident · German Shepherd heart injury symptoms · dog blood clot treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe a case of traumatic endocardial rupture, without obvious clinical signs of cardiac injury, resulting in acute thrombosis of the forelimbs in a dog. CASE SUMMARY: A young adult male German Shepherd Dog presented with vehicular polytrauma. The dog was diagnosed with hypovolemic shock and traumatic pneumothorax and was stabilized, having displayed no clinical indicators of cardiac dysfunction. For 10 days, the dog was treated with no complications in the hospital for wounds but presented again shortly after discharge with bilateral forelimb paraparesis determined likely to be due to thrombosis. The dog was euthanized, and the body was submitted for necropsy. A diagnosis was made of left atrial endocardial rupture with thrombosis, multifocal pulmonary bullae and contusions, and cutaneous abrasions, all secondary to trauma. Based on the dog's physical examination on secondary presentation and the necropsy findings of a thrombus adherent to a left atrial tear, it was suspected that one or more thrombus fragments dislodged and occluded the major supplying vessels of the forelimbs. NEW OR UNIQUE INFORMATION PROVIDED: Blunt cardiac injury may occur without overt clinical manifestations of dysfunction and may lead to thrombosis and associated complications.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41549549/