Female Urogenital Flashcards

1
Q

Blood supply to ovaries

A

Ovarian artery comes right off the aorta
On the right it drains to the right vena cava
On the left ovarian vein drains into the renal vein

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2
Q

Vessels in fat is called

A

A vascular pedicle

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3
Q

Incision for ovarian hysterectomy

A

Caudal abdomen in thirds from the umbilicus to the caudal abdomen
Dogs, you incise in the cranial 3rd
Cats you incise in the middle third
Go through lina alba

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4
Q

OH surfer

A
Start left
run hook along abdominal wall as far as you go
180 degrees
Re-orient vertically
pull out
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5
Q

Complications

A

dropped pedicle
clamping/ligating ureters
incisional complications (seroma, dehescense)
OVarian remnant
Uterine stump pyometra
Urinary incontenance
Fistulous tracts with non-absorbable suture.

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6
Q

Pyometra bacterial causes

A

e.coli - but culture & sensitivity

Can cause toxicity (sepsis)

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7
Q

Pyometra - Diagnosis/Signs

A

based on clinical signs/discharge, PU/PD, may or may not be toxic

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8
Q

Pyometra occurs when?

A

dogs: 4-8 weeks post-heat
cats: 1-4 weeks post-heat

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9
Q

Treatment for pyometra

A

Stabalize with fluids & antibiotics & spay

Ampicilin & enrofloxacin (fluoroquinolone)

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10
Q

Spaying with pyometra

A
do not use car malts
Prevent spillage
Don't over sew (don't invert)
Can use momentum
Lavage abdomen as much as possible
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11
Q

C-section - when

A
dystocia (small pelvic canal
Uterine inertia
Fatigue
Rupture
Puppies are overdue
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12
Q

C-section - how?

A
Clip, prep & then induce
Ventral midline (bigger)
lift the uterus, don't pull
Pack the abdomen
Incise the uterine body, milk out puppies, break placenta
Ligate and cute the umbilical vessels
Pass to assistant
Placenta comes off easily, remove
Close in 2 layers with 2-0/3-0 absorbable monofilament, simple continuous, then inverting second layer (cushing's lembert)
Clean incision, 
Discard towels
Close
OHE--> do this after removing puppies or at a later date
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13
Q

Episiotomy

A
Difficult 
Expose urethral papilla,
For reducing vagial prolapse
Openieng dorsal aspect of the vuvla
2 layers
Catheter
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14
Q

vaginal mass or protrution

A

Vaginal hyperplasia
Vaginal prolapse
Neopalis
Uterine prolapse

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15
Q

vaginal mass or protrution - how to differentiate

A

Age
Stage
Paplation
Size shape

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16
Q

Vaginal hyperplasia - what is it, how to treat

A

Floor of the vagina
Edema/hyperplasia - due to estrogen
Lift up floor, can see the urethral papilla
May resolve after heat but can happen the next time
OHE/resection recommended

17
Q

Vaginal prolapse

A
Circumferetial
Rare, may or may not be edema
Manual reduction/purse-string sutures or surgical reduction or amputation to avoid breeding or birthing problems
Spay recommended (good prognosis)
If not removed - poor prognosis
18
Q

Peri-vulvar dermatitis

A

Estra skin that covers the vulva

Episo-plasty -remove the extra skin around the vulva and sew

19
Q

Mammary neoplasia

A

Most common tumour of female
Bening/mixed/adenocarcinoma/inflammatory carcinoma
Cats –> usually adenocarcinoma &
Treatment of cats with progesterone increases the risk
Metatstatsis & size doesn’t prognosis
Treat with ovariohysterectomy (spay before the first heat in dogs, cats under a year)

20
Q

Mammary neoplasia - work up

A

Pay attention to lymph nodes
non-specific CBC/biochem changes
Mets to lung possible
Look for iliac lymph node if caudal mamary tumours
FNA to tell between benign/malignant tumours

21
Q

Mammary neoplasia - prognosis

A

Bigger is badder for dogs
Size, speed of growth, number of nodules
Lymph node involvement, distant mets,
Ulcers

22
Q

Treatment Mammary neoplasia

A

surgery, except for inflammatory carcinoma
dogs cure = 50% (still send for histology & re-evaluate
Contraindicated for inflammatory carcinoma, metastasis or other medical issues

23
Q

Surgeries for mammary neoplasia

A

Lumpectomy or partial mamectomy (< 5mm at the edge of a gland) - include a 1cm margin and 1 fascial plane deep
2. Local mastectomy - simple (1 gland) or regional (glands that drain together) - 1,2,3 or 3,4,5 -> most
3. Unilateral mastectomy (1-5 on one side)
4. Bi-lateral (4-6 weeks apart)
(Can treat with ovariohystorectomy before removing, prevents uterine disease, and decreases size of mammary glands)

24
Q

Drainage for Mammary lymph nodes

A

1-3 sternal lymph nodes

3-5 popliteal lymph nodes

25
Q

Prognosis mammary neoplasia (dogs & cats)

A

Dogs: Malignant 1-2 years
Nodules > 3cm, lymph nodes involved, distant mets –> poorer prognosis
Cats, almost all malignant adenocarcinomas
If young, can have fibroadenomatous hyperplasia (hormone dependant, occurs at puberty and is benign)
-> rapid mastectomy including all lymph nodes
Tumours 2 cm survive 12 months