2008
DOI: 10.17221/1934-vetmed
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Analysis of therapeutic results and complications after colic surgery in 434 horses

Abstract: Out of the total number of 434 horses that underwent colic surgery, small intestine was operated in 195 (44.9%) patients, caecum in 10 (2.3%) horses, large colon surgery was performed in 196 (45.2%) cases and small colon surgery in 14 (3.2%) horses. In 12 patients (2.8%) two different parts of the gastrointestinal tract were affected simultaneously, one horse suffered from peritonitis, torsion of the uterus developed in two mares and three animals had negative surgical findings. Of 434 horses, 371 (85.5%) surv… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The inclusion of a single intestinal segment (jejunum) in our study contrasts with previous literature aimed at establishing general principles of repeat celiotomy, regardless of the diseased intestinal segment . Such general information is of little value to the management of individual horses, as most candidates for repeat celiotomy can be readily categorized by location of disease (small intestine vs large intestine) and initial surgical treatment (type of resection, no resection).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…The inclusion of a single intestinal segment (jejunum) in our study contrasts with previous literature aimed at establishing general principles of repeat celiotomy, regardless of the diseased intestinal segment . Such general information is of little value to the management of individual horses, as most candidates for repeat celiotomy can be readily categorized by location of disease (small intestine vs large intestine) and initial surgical treatment (type of resection, no resection).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Repeat celiotomy after colic surgery is reported in 4.7%‐14.6% of horses, most involving small intestinal procedures (57%‐88% of repeat celiotomies) . When horses treated with small intestinal surgery only are considered, 12%‐27% of horses required a repeat celiotomy .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In most of the cases the jejunum and ileum are the incarcerated segments, with a good prognosis and high rate of survival at discharge following the surgery (Mezerova et al, 2008a). Rarely, the large colon is the part of the bowel introduced into the inguinal canal or scrotal bag; foals are more likely to develop this herniation due to the fact that the inguinal canal is shorter and wider than in the mature horse (Robinson and Carmalt, 2009).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%