small animal GI surgery Flashcards

1
Q

problems with gastric and high int. vomiting and how to correct prior to surgery

A
  • loss of HCl
  • dehydration
  • insufficient food intake
    correct: IV isotonic crystalloids, IV K+ supplement
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2
Q

problems with lower int. vomiting and how to correct prior to surgery

A

Loss of pancreatic Na, HCO3
dehydration
insufficient food intake
correct: IV isotonic crystalloids, IV K+ supplement

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3
Q

How to correct before surgery if have GI bleeding

A

blood tansfusion, iron supplement

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4
Q

What do gastric surgical diseases cause?

A

Gastric vomiting

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5
Q

What do S.int complete obstruction cause?

A

Acute vomiting

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6
Q

What do S.int partial obstruction cuase?

A

chronic vom, diah, weight loss

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7
Q

What does GI bleeding cause?

A

haematemesis (vom blood)

melaena

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8
Q

Stomach surgery risks and precautions?

A
  • Acid kills most bacteria
  • antibiotics not necessary if young,healthy and under 90 min surgery
  • single broad spectrum antibi. with anaerobic cover (2nd gen cephalosporin / amoxycillin-clavulante)
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9
Q

Small intestine surgery risk and precautions?

A

10^2 - 10^6 CFU/ml 50%anaerobe

  • use antibiotics if compromised
  • broad spectrum with anaerobic cover
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10
Q

Large intestine surgery risk and precautions?

A

10^9 - 10^11 CFU/ml 79%anaerobe

  • always use antibiotics
  • broad spectrum and anaerobic only (metronidazole)
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11
Q

Methods to decrease contamination?

A
  • isolate site of entry
  • pack abdomen with moist swabs
  • change instruments and gloves for contaminated part
  • lavage wound after closure
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12
Q

GI wound healing - 2 phases

A
Lag phase (1-4 d)
Proliferative phase (3-14 d)
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13
Q

Different organ healing abilities

A

stomach - rapid and uncomplicated

s. int - 75-80% of tensile strength by d 14
l. int - 50% of tensile strength by d 14

Traumatic surgical techniques and electrocautery can affect healing

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14
Q

Suture material and why?

A

Monofilament so no crevices for bacteria, absorbable, retains strength >5 d

E.g PDS II

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15
Q

What is an exploratory laparotomy?

A

direct visual and tactile exam of the abdominal organs at surgery via and incision into the abdomen.

incision from xiphisternum to pubis

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16
Q

Gastrotomy

A

between greater and lesser curvature

repair in 2 layers - mucosa + submucosa and serosa + muscularis

17
Q

Enterotomy

A

milk contents away

incise along along anti-mesenteric border

18
Q

Liver biopsy

A

first try fine needle aspirate and trucut biopsy

take from periphery as less blood

19
Q

Pancreas biopsy

A

Tighten suture ligature around area before cutting

20
Q

Check viability of intestines

A

pulsations in arterial BV
peristalsis
colour
wall thickness

21
Q

What is luminal disparity and how to get around it?

A

different opening sizes when resecting the int.

  • space sutures further apart on large size
  • transect small side at an angle to match diameter
  • reduce big side with sutures
  • spatulate small side
22
Q

How to do an end - to - end anastomosis

A

Simple interrupted suture
1st - on mesenteric border as harder to apposition
2nd on anti-mesenteric border

23
Q

Two ways of supporting a wound

A

omentalisation

serosal patch - tack adjacent healthy int. to wound

24
Q

Signs and how to deal with a string like foreign body?

A

on radiograph : concertina int., stacking of int

cut string up…multiple enterotomies

25
Q

What is intussusception? Signs? How to reduce?

A

invagination of one portion of the GI tract into the lumen of an adjoining segment

Signs: abdo pain/mass, parallel lines on ultrasounds, gas distension on radiograph

push to reduce and resect if needed

can prevent hapenning again by entroplication - suturing loops of int together

26
Q

What is the main complication of GI surgery?

A

Septic peritonitis - bacterial inf of peritoneum

wound dehiscence

27
Q

What are the results of septic peritonitis?

A

Hypovolaemic shock, systemic infl response, DIC, 50% die

28
Q

Signs and treatment of septic peritonitis?

A

Signs - vomiting, anorexia, depression, abd pain, hypovolaemia, pyrexia, wound discharge, dia, haematochezia, melaena, haematemesis

3-5 d post surgery

Treat - pre-op stabilisation, exp lap to correct leak, peritoneal lavage and drainage, extensive post op care

29
Q

4 approaches to colorectal surgery

A
  • ventral midline laparotomy
  • pelvic split
  • dorsal perianal approach
  • transanal
30
Q

complication of resecting too much colon?

A

reduce resevoir and absorptive capacities ( increased faecal frequency and wateryness)

31
Q

How much rectum can be resected out?

A

no more than 6 cm

32
Q

Surgical diseases of the colon and rectum? (3)

A

megacolon
colorectal neoplasia
rectal prolapse

33
Q

secondary megacolon causes

A
pelvic fracture
intrapelvic space occupying lesion
colorectal neoplasia / abcess
perineal hernia
inappropriate diet
34
Q

How to diagnose megacolon?

A

chronic constipation, tenesmus, vom, anorexia, weight loss, dehydration

35
Q

Signs of colorectal neoplasia

A

tenesmus, haematochezia, increased defecation frequency, ribbon - like faeces, rectal prolapse, weight loss

36
Q

2 ways to treat colorectal neoplasia

A

submucosal resection

colorectal resection and anastomosis

37
Q

how to repare a rectal prolaps

A

resect if needed, push in and put a stitch in anus to decrease diameter.
give faecal softners, anthelmintics, low residue diet

38
Q

treatment of anal sac disease

A
  • mannual expression
  • sedate and catheterise them (sample and cytology)
  • anal sacculectomy (open or closed removal)