Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with vaginal rupture and organs protruding after birth
By Prassinos, Nikitas N et al.·Published in Acta veterinaria Hungarica·2010·Companion Animal Clinic·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Vaginal rupture and evisceration in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 1.5-year-old German Shepherd mix was brought to the vet after giving birth, showing signs of bleeding from the vulva and a mass in the perineal area. The dog was in shock, dehydrated, and had parts of her intestines and bladder protruding from her vulva due to a vaginal rupture. The vet stabilized her condition and performed surgery to repair the damage, but unfortunately, the dog passed away 12 hours later. The likely cause of the rupture was trauma from delivering oversized puppies.
People also search for: dog vaginal rupture after giving birth · German Shepherd mixed breed bleeding vulva · dog evisceration treatment · oversized puppies complications in dogs
Abstract
A 1.5-year-old German Shepherd mixed breed dog was admitted with mild haemorrhage from the vulva and a perineal mass of 24-hour duration, which had been first observed immediately after parturition. Parturition had occurred at low ambient temperature, and only one puppy survived out of the seven oversized fetuses. The dog was in poor body condition, dehydrated, hypothermic, depressed, non-ambulatory and in a state of shock. Intestinal loops, the urinary bladder and the uterine horns and body were protruding from the vulva. A true vaginal prolapse was also observed. The abdominal viscera were flushed with warm sterile saline solution, protected and maintained wet. The laboratory findings included moderate anaemia, leukocytosis, hypoalbuminaemia, azotaemia and elevated liver enzyme activities. Stabilisation of the dog's general condition was attempted before surgery. Antimicrobial and analgesic drugs were also administered. After exploratory laparotomy the protruding organs, which were in good condition, were reduced. A recent rupture in the vaginal wall, approximately 6 cm long, was observed. Ovariohysterectomy and partial vaginectomy were performed. The preoperative course of therapy was continued, but the bitch died 12 hours later. The probable cause of vaginal rupture and evisceration in this bitch was tenesmus and/or trauma due to the oversized fetuses.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20713322/