A 12-year-old stallion was evaluated because of pollakiuria; endoscopy of the urinary tract during general anesthesia revealed that the urinary bladder was intact. After recovery, the stallion developed clinical and biochemical signs of bladder rupture, which was confirmed by endoscopy. Cystoplasty in adult stallions represents a unique surgical dilemma; the large distance between the incision site and the bladder necessitates the repair be accomplished under maximum tension with minimal exposure. Because traditional surgical approaches through ventral midline or paramedian incisions provide limited access and viewing, laparoscopy was used to provide a definitive diagnosis, good viewing, easy access, tension-free dissection, and a secure repair. Lack of surgical complications and postoperative discomfort, rapid and uncomplicated healing, and patient-client satisfaction make laparoscopic cystoplasty the preferred method for surgical repair of ruptured urinary bladder in adult stallions.
Findings of ultrasonographic evaluation of the hoof appear to be useful in determining the cause of caudal heel pain and characterizing the components of navicular syndrome in horses.
Metatarsal injuries with exposed bone are described in seven horses. Superficial osteitis and sequestrum formation occurred in six of the seven horses. The basic pathophysiology includes local vascular stasis leading to ischemic necrosis of osteocytes and establishment of bacterial infection within dead bone. Radiographic features of superficial osteitis and sequestrum formation include reactive periosteal new bone formation, an area of radiodense necrotic bone (sequestrum) surrounded by a radiolucent zone of granulation tissue, which in turn, is surrounded by an area of increased radiodensity (involucrum). The presence of a sequestrum may usually be confirmed radiographically by 12–14 days after injury. Surgical management included wound debridement, wound irrigation, bandaging or casting, sequestrectomy and skin grafting. Five of the seven patients required sequestrectomy, in one the sequestrum disappeared without removal. Mixed bacterial populations were commonly found in the wounds. No specific etiologic agent was associated with sequestrum formation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.