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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Use of a hand-assisted laparoscopic surgical technique for closure of an extensive mesojejunal rent in a horse.

Journal:
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
Year:
2013
Authors:
Witte, Thomas H et al.
Affiliation:
Swiss Institute of Equine Medicine
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old Swiss Warmblood gelding weighing about 1,261 pounds was brought in because he was showing signs of severe abdominal pain. The vet found that his abdomen was very swollen and there were signs that something was wrong inside, but they couldn't do an ultrasound right away due to his pain. After performing surgery to correct a problem with his colon, the horse continued to show pain, leading to another surgery where they discovered a serious issue with a part of his small intestine being trapped in a large tear in the mesentery (the tissue that supports the intestines). They used a special surgical technique called hand-assisted laparoscopic surgery to fix the problem, and despite some minor complications, the horse made a full recovery.

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: A 7-year-old 573-kg (1,261 -lb) Swiss Warmblood gelding was evaluated because of signs of acute abdominal pain. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Physical examination revealed a markedly distended abdomen with subjectively reduced borborygmi in all abdominal quadrants. A large, gas-distended viscus was present at the pelvic brim preventing complete palpation of the abdomen per rectum. Ultrasonographic evaluation could not be safely performed in the initial evaluation because of severe signs of abdominal pain. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Ventral midline celiotomy was performed, and right dorsal displacement of the ascending colon was corrected. Progressive signs of abdominal pain after surgery prompted repeat ventral midline celiotomy, and small intestinal incarceration in a large, radial mesojejunal rent was detected. The incarceration was reduced, but the defect was not fully accessible for repair via the celiotomy. Repair of the mesenteric defect was not attempted, and conservative management was planned after surgery; however, signs of colic returned. A standard laparoscopic approach was attempted from both flanks in the standing patient, but the small intestine could not be adequately mobilized for full evaluation of the rent. Hand-assisted laparoscopic surgery (HALS) allowed identification and reduction of jejunal incarceration and repair of the mesenteric rent. Although minor ventral midline incisional complications were encountered, the horse recovered fully. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: HALS techniques should be considered for repair of mesenteric rents in horses. In the horse of this report, HALS facilitated identification, evaluation, and repair of a large radial mesenteric rent that was not accessible from a ventral median celiotomy.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24094265/