Point-of-Care Ultrasound Techniques for the Small Animal Practitioner. Группа авторов

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Point-of-Care Ultrasound Techniques for the Small Animal Practitioner - Группа авторов


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(see Figures 7.12, 36.8–36.12). In contrast, patients with pericardial effusion/tamponade and right‐sided congestive heart failure have a CVC that is expected to be “FAT” having a large maximum diameter with little respirophasic diametrical change because of the severe cardiac‐related hepatic venous congestion (see Figures 7.12, 36.8–36.12). The terms “flat” and “FAT” have been published as terms that similarly characterize the inferior vena cava (IVC) at the subxiphoid view in people (Ferrada et al. 2012a,b). Integration of other POCUS and FAST findings is imperative for accurate interpretation. More information regarding the CVC and its evaluation may be found in Chapters 19, 20, 26, 36, and 37.

       Canine AX‐Related Heparin‐Induced Hemoabdomen – Single Witnessed or Unwitnessed Hymenoptera sp. Envenomation

      Although we were the first group to describe the phenomenon in the veterinary literature (Lisciandro 2016b), all the credit goes to Dr Scott Johnson, of Austin, Texas. When Dr Johnson took our Global FAST course in 2010, he remarked that he had observed hemoabdomen in anaphylactic dogs, and that we should start looking during AFAST. We heeded his suggestion and have seen close to 100 canine anaphylactic dogs with positive fluid scores and dozens with confirmed hemoabdomen that responded to medical treatment (Lisciandro 2014a, 2016b; Hnatusko et al. 2019). Importantly, these are witnessed or unwitnessed events likely caused by a presumed single Hymenoptera species envenomation (not massive bee envenomation). The great majority of anaphylactic dogs have no obvious cutaneous signs (Lisciandro 2016b; Hnatusko et al. 2019).

      Heparin, a clinically tangible constituent of mast cells, likely plays a major role, thus the addition of “heparin‐induced” by the author to its descriptor (Lisciandro 2016b). The importance of recognizing this AX‐related heparin‐induced hemoabdomen is that these dogs are medically treated (Lisciandro 2014a, 2016b; Caldwell et al. 2018; Birkbeck et al. 2019; Hnatusko et al. 2019) and inadvertently taking these dogs to surgery will anecdotally result in a fatal outcome (Lisciandro 2014a, 2016b; Hnatusko et al. 2019). Interestingly, in a published case series of 432 dogs with hemoabdomen, 86 were operated, but only 83 were included in the study because the three that were excluded had no histopathological diagnosis (Lux et al. 2013). One has to wonder if these three dogs were AX‐related heparin‐induced hemoabdomen cases.

       Small‐Volume Bleeders/Effusions

Image described by caption and surrounding text.

      Source: Reproduced with permission of Dr Gregory Lisciandro, Hill Country Veterinary Specialists and FASTVet.com, Spicewood, TX.

      The manner in which the author recommends managing these cases is to get a baseline coagulation profile, when possible, as standard of care. In cases with coagulation profiles >25% of upper reference range, clotting factors should be replaced, that is, fresh frozen plasma (FFP). However, if a coagulation profile is not possible, AFS 1 and 2 (modified AFS system <3) dogs are “small‐volume effusions/bleeders” and, having an occult hemoabdomen until proven otherwise, do not have enough blood in their abdominal cavity to be life‐threatening. In fact, many AFS 3 and 4 (modified AFS system ≥3) will likewise resolve within 24–48 hours, if not excessively coagulopathic, with appropriate treatment (including initial treatment of glucocorticoids and histamine‐2 receptor blockers) to prevent the “second episode of anaphylaxis.” These treatment strategies are recommended in people (Simons et al. 2015).


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