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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vacuum drain surgery to treat ear hematomas in five dogs

By Pavletic, Michael M·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2015·Department of Surgery·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of laterally placed vacuum drains for management of aural hematomas in five dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Five dogs, including a Newfoundland and a Golden Retriever, were treated for aural hematomas, which are swollen areas in the ear caused by blood collecting between the skin and cartilage. The dogs underwent surgery where small incisions were made to place vacuum drains in the hematomas. These drains helped remove the fluid and were left in for about 18 to 21 days. After the drains were removed, all the hematomas healed well, and the cosmetic results were excellent for most dogs, with only one showing slight wrinkling of the ear.

People also search for: dog ear hematoma treatment · aural hematoma surgery dogs · vacuum drain for dog ear swelling

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: 5 dogs (a Newfoundland, Golden Retriever, Shiba Inu, Staffordshire Terrier, and Vizsla) were referred for evaluation and treatment of unilateral aural hematomas within a week after their formation. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Aural hematomas involved the left (3) or right (2) ears. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: With patients under anesthesia, the aural hematomas were approached surgically from the convex, or lateral, pinnal surface. Two small incisions were used to position a vacuum drain into the incised hematoma cavity. The drain exited at the base of the pinna and adjacent cervical skin. The free end of the drain was attached to a vacuum reservoir for 18 to 21 days. Drains and skin sutures were removed at this time along with the protective Elizabethan collar. All hematomas resolved and surgical sites healed during the minimum 6-month follow-up period. Cosmetic results were considered excellent in 4 of 5 patients. Slight wrinkling of the pinna in 1 patient resulted from asymmetric enlargement of the cartilaginous walls of the hematoma, where vacuum application resulted in a slight folding of the redundant lateral cartilage wall. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The described treatment was efficient, economical, and minimally invasive and required no bandaging or wound care. Placement of the drain tubing on the convex (lateral) aspect sheltered the system from displacement by patients with an Elizabethan collar in place. Overall cosmetic results were excellent; asymmetric enlargement of the cartilaginous walls of the hematoma with slight folding of the pinna was seen in 1 patient.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25517333/