By
Keryn Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE --
When
Regan's owners brought her in, attending veterinarians knew
they had to work quickly to save the 4-month-old golden
retriever puppy's life. "The
puppy was playing outside at her home and suddenly began
having severe difficulty breathing. The referring
veterinarian sent her here, and when we took X-rays, we saw
something round in her windpipe," said Dr. Andrew Mackin,
service chief of the Small Animal Internal Medicine Service
at Mississippi State University's College of Veterinary
Medicine. Mackin
said it was necessary to anesthetize Regan even though doing
so is risky in an animal with an airway
obstruction. "We put
the bronchoscope down her airway and found, right down where
the airway splits in two, this big, round lump of what
looked like wood. We were very lucky that we got the snare
around the object on the first try and popped it out,"
Mackin said. "When we pulled it out, we saw that it was an
acorn." Once
the acorn was removed, Regan was back to 100 percent.
"Without
this scope, there was just no way we could have solved
Regan's problem without major chest surgery, which would
have been pretty risky and very difficult," Mackin
said. Life-saving
emergency rescues are not necessarily typical with endoscopy
equipment, but the minimally invasive scopes often enable
doctors to diagnose and treat animals without major surgery.
MSU's veterinary college recently purchased a number of new
flexible and rigid endoscopes for clinical use, completing
the array of scopes necessary for performing both routine
and specialized endoscopic procedures. Scopes
often are used to place feeding tubes in cats with hepatic
lipidosis, or fatty liver. This severe liver disease used to
be almost always fatal because cats would stop eating and
eventually starve to death. "Now,
in about five to 10 minutes, we can use the scope to put a
feeding tube in the cat's stomach. The tube is very
well-tolerated, and the cat can be at home and very happy
and active, with the owners feeding via the tube twice a day
until the cat's appetite comes back and the fatty liver
resolves," Mackin said. "We've saved plenty of cats' lives
this way." Veterinarians
use these scopes to examine the nasal passages, trachea and
major airways, esophagus, stomach and much of the small
intestine, all of the large intestine and colon, and the
urethra and urinary bladder on most dogs and cats. Looking
at the inner surface of these various hollow organs and
tubes allows Mackin to diagnose foreign bodies, infections,
tumors and various inflammatory conditions. Another
recent case involved a dog that had a sharp bone temporarily
stuck in its food pipe, deep in the chest cavity, that
created a hole between the food pipe and the lungs. The bone
eventually moved on, but a small hole remained. "Every
time the dog ate or drank, food and water would leak from
the food pipe into the lungs, and the dog would cough,"
Mackin explained. "Using a scope in the airways, we found
the small hole and passed a wire probe through it, from the
airway into the food pipe." Mackin
left that probe in place, enabling the surgeon to go in and
find the hole. CVM small animal surgeon Dr. Ron McLaughlin
then was able to easily locate the hole and repair the
defect. McLaughlin
said scope technology has revolutionized veterinary medicine
because it allows surgeons to see areas that otherwise are
difficult to assess. The arthroscope, for example, is used
to diagnose and treat joint injuries and
disorders. "The
enhanced visualization of joint structures and surfaces
leads to greater precision while identifying and treating
problems within the joint," McLaughlin said. "In our
hospital we use arthroscopy on a daily basis for the
diagnosis and treatment of a variety of disorders within the
knee, shoulder and elbow of our canine patients. After
seeing these structures, we are able to treat tears within
the ligaments or defects within the cartilage surfaces
appropriately before stabilizing the joint." McLaughlin
said arthroscopy, combined with computed tomography, or CT,
has allowed veterinary surgeons the ability to recognize and
treat developmental disorders like osteoarthritis before
they become debilitating. The
veterinary college also recently began to provide treatment
of some small animal abdominal and chest conditions using
endoscopic surgical techniques. Laparoscopic surgery for the
abdomen and thorocoscopic surgery for the chest are
primarily available at only a handful of veterinary surgical
referral centers throughout the country. Endoscopes
are not just beneficial to small animals. CVM large animal
surgeon Dr. Robert Linford said the instruments frequently
are used in horses and sometimes cows. "We
recently examined a horse for a bloody nose. The endoscope
allowed us to see that the blood originated from a tumor
deep within the horse's head. Untreated, such tumors often
grow big enough to cut off a horse's ability to breathe,"
Linford said. "With the endoscope, we were able to detect
the problem early and kill the tumor with a 15-minute
injection procedure through the scope. The treatment was
less painful for the horse, and considerably less expensive
that regular surgery." Cows
can have problems when an object lodges in the esophagus,
preventing the animal from releasing excess gas from one of
its four stomachs. Veterinarians use the endoscope to see
what kind of object is causing the problem and whether it
can be pulled out or the problem treated. Besides
the obvious benefit of providing better care to patients,
the scopes give veterinary students a real-life experience
they otherwise might not have. "We use
the scope to demonstrate what the inside of various parts of
the animal looks like, and to teach. In particular, by
becoming familiar with the scope, our students, interns and
residents can then decide if having a scope will be useful
for their practice," Mackin said. Most
specialty practices have scopes, and general practitioners
increasingly are buying them. Mackin said the more
individual veterinarians start using scopes, the more
minimally invasive diagnoses and treatments will become
possible. -30- Released:
Jan. 20, 2005
Animal
Health
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New equipment
allows better
veterinary care
Contact: Dr. Andrew Mackin, (662) 325-6631
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:54
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm05/050120.html
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