Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Pleural access ports used to treat repeated lung collapse in two dogs
By Cahalane, Alane Kosanovich & Flanders, James A·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2012·Peace Avenue Veterinary Clinic, China·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Use of pleural access ports for treatment of recurrent pneumothorax in two dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
An 8-year-old male mixed-breed dog and a 13-year-old female mixed-breed dog were both brought in for breathing problems, including coughing and rapid breathing, due to spontaneous pneumothorax (air in the chest cavity). After initial treatments like draining the air and surgery, the pneumothorax kept coming back. To manage this, the vets placed special ports in both dogs to allow for repeated air removal without more surgery. The older dog has not had any further issues for over 23 months, while the younger dog had another surgery but was later euthanized due to recurring breathing problems.
People also search for: dog breathing problems · pneumothorax treatment in dogs · mixed-breed dog coughing · dog lung surgery recovery
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: An 8-year-old castrated male mixed-breed dog (dog 1) and a 13-year-old spayed female mixed-breed dog (dog 2) were evaluated because of spontaneous pneumothorax. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Both dogs had decreased bronchovesicular sounds with coughing, tachypnea, cyanosis, lethargy, or a combination of these clinical signs. Radiographic examination revealed pneumothorax in both dogs and consolidation of a lung lobe in dog 2. Pneumothorax was alleviated following thoracocentesis in both dogs but recurred. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Dog 1 was initially treated by placement of a thoracostomy tube but underwent thoracotomy when pneumothorax recurred after tube removal; left caudal lung lobectomy was performed because a ruptured bulla was suspected, and a pulmonary bulla was histologically confirmed. Dog 2 underwent thoracotomy with left caudal lung lobectomy and partial removal of the left cranial lung lobe; diffuse pulmonary emphysema was diagnosed. This dog underwent a second surgery for right caudal lung lobectomy because of torsion. When pneumothorax recurred and additional surgery was not considered feasible, pleural access ports were placed in both dogs for repeated removal of air from the thoracic cavity. Ports were used clinically for 17 days in dog 1 and 14 days in dog 2. Dog 1 successfully underwent another surgery when pneumothorax recurred 18 days after port placement but was euthanized 17 months later when dyspnea and tachypnea recurred. Pneumothorax had not recurred further in dog 2 twenty-three months after port placement. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Findings suggested that pleural access ports may have a role in the management of spontaneous pneumothorax in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22852572/