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RADIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSIS OF MECHANICAL OBSTRUCTION IN DOGS BASED ON RELATIVE SMALL INTESTINAL EXTERNAL DIAMETERS
Author(s) -
Finck Cyrielle,
D'Anjou MarcAndré,
Alexander Kate,
Specchi Swan,
Beauchamp Guy
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
veterinary radiology and ultrasound
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.541
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1740-8261
pISSN - 1058-8183
DOI - 10.1111/vru.12153
Subject(s) - medicine , radiography , vomiting , dilation (metric space) , retrospective cohort study , nuclear medicine , gastroenterology , radiology , mathematics , combinatorics
Mechanical obstruction is a frequent cause of acute vomiting in dogs requiring prompt diagnosis to improve patient management and prognosis. The purpose of this retrospective study was to compare small intestinal radiographic characteristics in dogs with versus without mechanical intestinal obstruction. Fifty dogs with gastrointestinal clinical signs and abdominal radiographs were recruited from hospital record archives and assigned to groups (group 1, obstructive, n = 25; group 2, nonobstructive n = 25). Abdominal radiographs were randomized and independently interpreted by three examiners who were unaware of group status. Intestinal dilation was subjectively scored based on distribution (segmental, regional or diffuse), and severity (absent, mild, moderate or severe). Small intestinal maximal diameter (SI max ), L5 vertebral body height, small intestinal minimal diameter (SI min ), and an estimated average of small intestinal diameters (SI ave ) were measured and three ratios were calculated: SI max /L5, SI max /SI min , and SI max /SI ave . Segmental dilation was more prevalent in obstructed dogs for all examiners ( P ≤ 0.03) and most nonobstructed dogs had no dilation ( P ≤ 0.05). All ratios were higher in obstructed dogs ( P < 0.002). Subjective dilation scores and ratio measurements had low interobserver agreement (absent to fair, with kappa values between −0.06 and 0.57) and reproducibility (coefficients of 0.35–0.61). Findings indicated that dogs with SI max /L5 ≤ 1.4, SI max /SI min ≤ 2, and SI max /SI ave ≤ 1.3 values are very unlikely to be mechanically obstructed; dogs with SI max /L5 ≥ 2.4, SI max /SI min ≥ 3.4 and SI max /SI ave ≥ 1.9 are very likely obstructed, particularly if segmental dilation (less than 25% of the small intestine) is present. Dogs with ratios falling between these thresholds may need further testing unless other signs justify surgical exploration or endoscopy.