Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with swollen leg and bleeding treated for vein malformation
By Chang, Stephany et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2020·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Use of percutaneous foam sclerotherapy with 1.5% sodium tetradecyl sulfate for treatment of a pelvic limb venous malformation in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 6-year-old mixed-breed dog was brought in for swelling and intermittent limping of her right back leg, along with bleeding in the perianal and vulvar areas. The vet found that she had a venous malformation (a problem with blood vessels) in her leg, which was confirmed through imaging tests. To treat this, the vet injected a special foam solution into the affected area and gave her a corticosteroid injection, followed by a bandage for a few days. After six weeks, her swelling and limping had improved significantly, and by 21 months later, she showed no signs of lameness related to the malformation, with only minor issues remaining.
People also search for: dog leg swelling treatment · mixed-breed dog limping · venous malformation in dogs · dog bleeding from vulva · dog foam sclerotherapy
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: A 6-year-old 17-kg (37.4-lb) spayed female mixed-breed dog was evaluated because of swelling and intermittent lameness of the right pelvic limb and perianal and vulvar bleeding caused by a suspected arteriovenous malformation. CLINICAL FINDINGS: The right pelvic limb had a diffuse, raised, cobblestone-like appearance with lameness, edema, and multifocal ulcerations. The abdominal skin had multifocal circular erythematous lesions, the perianal region was erythematous, and the vestibule had superficial distended vessels. Ultrasonography and CT did not reveal the presence of an arteriovenous malformation; however, digital subtraction venography confirmed the presence of a venous malformation (VM) throughout the limb. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: A mixture of foam sclerosant (1.5% sodium tetradecyl sulfate) and contrast medium was agitated with air and injected percutaneously into the VM. The dog received an injection of corticosteroid solution, and a soft-padded bandage was applied to the limb for 3 days. Six weeks later, the dog would intermittently hop when running, and the limb was mildly edematous with ecchymotic lesions; the swelling and lameness had improved considerably. Perianal and vulvar bleeding and dilation of the vestibular vessels had resolved. At 21 months after the procedure, examination revealed no right pelvic limb lameness related to the VM; only small cyst-like lesions and edema around the tarsus remained. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The favorable clinical outcome for this dog for a 21-month period after treatment of a pelvic limb VM with foam sclerotherapy has suggested that foam sclerotherapy may be used to successfully treat limb VMs in some dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32459582/