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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Removing porcupine quills from inside dogs' chests and their recovery

By Walker, Meagan Ann et al.·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2022·Department of Companion Animals, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Treatment and outcomes of five dogs with intrathoracic migration of porcupine quills.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Five dogs were brought in after porcupine quills migrated into their chests, causing breathing problems and fluid around the heart. The veterinarians performed surgery to remove the quills, using gentle pulling techniques and stitches to secure the area. In three of the dogs, they found quills near the heart that weren't visible on imaging before surgery. Thankfully, all the dogs recovered well after the procedures and were able to go home.

People also search for: dog porcupine quill removal · dog breathing problems porcupine quills · dog heart fluid treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the perioperative findings and outcomes in dogs that underwent exploratory thoracotomy following porcupine quill migration and report (1) the use of traction alone for the removal of superficial quills in the pulmonary parenchyma, and (2) the use of exploratory pericardiotomy for the incidental identification of cardiac quills. ANIMALS: Five client-owned dogs. STUDY DESIGN: Short case series. METHODS: Medical records of dogs with pneumothorax or pericardial effusion secondary to porcupine quill migration from January 2019 to January 2022 were reviewed. Advanced imaging and a median sternotomy were performed in each dog. Demographics, preoperative findings, surgical treatment, and outcome were recorded. RESULTS: Pulmonary quills were treated with gentle traction or lung lobectomy. The intraoperative palpation or appearance of the pericardium prompted pericardiotomy in three dogs, exposing epicardial and intravascular quills. No evidence of these quills was detected on preoperative advanced imaging or on gross appearance of the pericardium. Quills were removed with a combination of gentle traction, purse-string sutures, and mattress sutures. Pneumothorax and pericardial effusion resolved postoperatively in all dogs. All dogs survived to discharge. CONCLUSION: Traction allowed removal of quills that were superficially attached to the pulmonary parenchyma without the need for subsequent lobectomy. Epicardial and myocardial quills were detected following pericardiotomy in three dogs despite the absence of quills grossly penetrating the pericardium. Preoperative imaging did not allow consistent detection of quills.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35830156/