Equine 8 Flashcards

1
Q

what is SIRS triggered by

A

bacterial toxins
- lipopolysaccharide derived from gram negative bacteria
- gram positive organisms partocularly S aureus
- burns, neoplasia, pancreatitis (small animals)
lead to inflammation causing cell death and apoptosis

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2
Q

what is SIRS

A

self-amplifying dysregulated systemic inflammatory response

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3
Q

what is sepsis

A

SIRS plus culture proving infection (humans, generally just assume in animals)

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4
Q

what is severe sepsis

A

sepsis with organ hypoperfusion or dysfunction (measure with renal output)

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5
Q

what is septick shock

A

severe sepsis plus systemic hypotension

common in foals, rare in adult horses

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6
Q

what is multi-organ dysfunction syndrome

A

altered organ function in an acutely ill animal such that haemostasis cannot be maintained without intervention - horses inevitably die

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7
Q

what is primary MODs

A

resulting from well-defined insult where the organ dysfunction occurs early and is a direct consequence of the insult itself e.g. burns, neoplasia

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8
Q

what is secondary MODs

A

organ failure not in direct response to the insult but as a consequence of SIRS

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9
Q

what is DIC

A

disseminated intravascular coagulation - pathological activation of coagulation

  • microvasculature clotting
  • haemorrhagic diathesis
  • consumption of procoagulants
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10
Q

what is DIC associated with

A

SIRS
sepsis
septic shock
MODs

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11
Q

what are the clinical signs of DIC in horses

A

thrombosis
petechial haemorrhage more common in foals
rarely - bleeding following trauma

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12
Q

how is DIC diagnosed in horses

A
3 of the 5 below 
= Thrombocytopenia 
= Prolonged prothrombin time 
○ Prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time 
○ Increased fibrin degradation products 
= Decreased antithrombin 3
also low fibrinogen but not often used
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13
Q

what are the common sequelae of GI disease in horses

A
SIRS or sepsis 
 Hypovolaemia 
	○ acute pre-renal disease 
 Dysregulation of perfusion 
	○ Some patients have ok circulation but capillary beds shut down (exchange site) so tissues become hypoxic 
 Hypoproteinaemia 
 Ileus 
 Nutritional challenges 
	○ Poorly functioning gut doesn't absorb food effectively 
	○ Hypovolaemia means blood supply to GIT is reduced 
 Change in gut flora 
 Thrombophlebitis 
 Coagulation abnormalities 
 Pain
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14
Q

what are the less common sequelae to GI disease in horses

A
Ventricular dysrhythmias 
	○ Especially with GDV/LCV (dog/horse)
 Laminitis (horse)
 Vomiting (dogs, cats) 
 Electrolyte abnormalities 
	○ Common 
	○ K increase in GDV
	○ Low Na and Cl with diarrhoea 
	○ Increased Na and Cl with hypovolaemia and low Mg and K - colic 
	    - Mg and K increased by eating 
	○ Treat if life-threatening, otherwise leave kidneys to sort 
 Anaemia
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15
Q

which factors must be corrected early in the critically ill patient to improve prognosis

A

hypovolaemia
electrolyte disturbances
hypotension
SIRS - some cases need surgery

need appropriate use of antimicrobials

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16
Q

what are the clinial signs of hypovolaemia in horses

A
  • mm colour congested or white
  • increased CRT
  • increased HR
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17
Q

what are the clinical pathological signs of hypovolaemia in horses

A
• Increased creatinine - horse 
• Increased urea and creatinine - dog 
- USG >1.030 in conjunction with other signs 
• Increased lactate 
• PCV and TP
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18
Q

what factors are used to monitor improvement of hypovolaemia in horses

A

• HR normalising
• Improved demeanour
• Repeat USG or starting to produce urine when previously anuric
• Repeat bloodwork max q4hours
○ Repeat lactate
§ Produced by cells. If you have had capillary bed shut down then fluids given, the beds open up and then lactate will double so need to take care with interpretation

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19
Q

describe the approach to hypovolaemia in horses

A

• Assess percentage fluid deficit (not dehydration)
• Calculate maintenance rates
○ Adults = 2ml/kg/hr
○ Neonates 2x adult rate ~5ml/kg/hr
• Replace 50% fluid deficit as bolus as fast as you can
○ Large bore, short catheter, hang fluids from a height
○ Re-examine animal at this point
• Replace remaining 50% and maintenance over the next 6-8 hours
○ Include fluid estimate of loss due to reflux/diarrhoea etc
○ Need to correct underlying problem

20
Q

why should oral fluids be avoided in cases of ileus

A
  • won’t be absorbed
  • will distend small intestines as not moving through
  • will cause discomfort/pain
21
Q

what electrolyte imbalance may be seen in horses that have had food withheld with resuscitation fluids

A

hypokalaemia

hypomagnesemia

22
Q

which electrolyte imbalance may be seen in horses that have diarrhoea

A

low Na

low Cl

23
Q

which electrolyte imbalances may be seen in hypovolaemia

A

slightly high Na and Cl

24
Q

which electrolyte imbalance may be seen in horses with LCV

A

hyperkalaemia and cardiac dysrhythmias secondary to muscle necrosis (rare)

25
Q

how is hypoproteinaemia monitored in horses

A
  • Total protein/total solids using refractometer
  • Albumin on biochemistry
  • Oedema - can see peripheral but not around organs
  • Total protein will be affected by albumins and globulins so could have very low albumin and very high globulins - Buffy coat will be bigger
26
Q

how is hypoproteinaemia treated in horses

A

colloidal support

  • plasma
    • cheap, immunogenic, disease transmission risk, short half-life
  • artificial
    • cellulose based e.g. gelofusine
    • may promote oedema
  • hydroxyethyl starches (don’t use)
    • don’t use especially in foals
    • will support but won’t increase protein
27
Q

how is SIRS and sepsis treated in horses

A
NSAIDs or steroids 
IV lidocaine 
wash out abdomen 
surgery 
bactericidal antibiotics if needed 
antiendotoxic drugs - po;ymixin B
28
Q

how is dysregulation of perfusion monitored

A

urine output - difficult in adult horses. use USG
capnograph
lactate
CRT

29
Q

how is dysregulation of perfusion treated

A

fluids
sympathomimetics
- dobutamine CRI
- dopamine

30
Q

why is ileus a concern in horses

A

leads to gastric distension and rupture as they cannot vomit

31
Q

what may cause ileus in the horse

A
reduced perfusion to GIT
pain 
stress
inflammation 
opioids
32
Q

how is ileus treated in horses

A
fluids 
analgesia 
pro-motility agents 
- lidocaine 
- metaclopramide (can cause neuro signs)
- erythromycin at sub-antimicrobial doses (abx resistance issues)
33
Q

how long may adult horses be starved for with minimal metabolic effects

A
  • 48-72 hours

- fat ponies and donkeys max 12-24 hours due to hyperlipaemia risk

34
Q

what effects does starvation have on the GI system

A

villi stunting
decreased absorptive capacity
predisposes to mild GI ulceration (usually reversible)

35
Q

how soon should horses be fed after surgery and what methods may be used

A

asap

  • enteral ideal but impossible if refluxing and have ileus
  • 5% dextrose (doesn’t provide enough nutrition)
  • PPN - 40-50% dextrose and amino acids
  • TPN - 40-50% dextrose, amino acids and lipid
36
Q

how is nutritional status monitored in horses

A

clinical signs - weakness, depression, weight loss, anorexia
blood glucose (not adults as don’t become hypoglycaemic)
triglyceride concentration
creatine kinase (will be high due to boxing etc)

37
Q

how are changes in GI flora managed in horses

A

do nothing common
no EBM to support use of pre- or pro- biotics
transfaunation via NG tube (pre-treat with proton-pump inhibitor)

38
Q

what predisposes horses to thrombophebitis

A

catheter placement - particularly if left in too long or placed in non-sterile way. cheap, hard, platic catheters worse

39
Q

how is thrombophlebitis prevented in horses

A

good hygiene

aseptic prep before catheter placement

40
Q

what are the signs of coagulation disorders in horses

A
  • bleeding
  • petechial haemorrhage
  • thrombi
41
Q

how are coagulation disorders prevented in horses

A

low molecular weight heparin in early disease states not if already bleeding

42
Q

how are coagulation disorders treated in horses

A

transfusion - missing clotting factors so use fresh plasma little and often

43
Q

how is laminitis following SIRS prevented

A
treat SIRS early 
fluids 
appropriate antibiotics 
heparin 
polymixin B
icing feet 
foot pads - frog support
44
Q

when may ventricular dysrhythmias occur in horses and dogs

A

dogs - following GDV and other causes of sepsis
horses - occasionally secondary to muscle necrosis. myocarditis secondary to SIRS
always check ECG in animals with higher HR than expected for other clinical signs

45
Q

how should ventricular dysrhythmias be approached

A
check electrolytes 
check volume status +/- fluid bolus 
IV magnesium sulphate - membrane stabiliser 
IV lidocaine 
IV procainamide
46
Q

describe anaemia in horses

A

can lose a lot of blood via GIT
concurrent hypovolaemia can mask degree due to haemoconcentration especially due to splenic contraction
treat with blood transfusion