Anal Sac Disorders PDF - Canine and Feline, 7th Edition
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Alexander H. Werner, Heather D. Edginton
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This veterinary textbook discusses anal sac disorders in dogs and cats, covering basics, causes, diagnosis and treatment options for various conditions such as impaction, infection, and neoplasia. Information is included on signalment, signs, causes, diagnosis, differential diagnosis, treatment and follow-up and possible complications. Includes illustrations.
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Canine and Feline, Seventh Edition 77 Anal Sac Disorders A...
Canine and Feline, Seventh Edition 77 Anal Sac Disorders A Compulsive disorder (anal licking). Colitis or other intestinal disorder. Keratinization disorder. Anal sac neoplasia (adenocarcinoma, Ā BASICS squamous cell carcinoma, melanoma). Perianal Ā MEDICATIONS OVERVIEW adenoma, adenocarcinoma. Perianal fistulae. DRUG(S) OF CHOICE Anal sacs are reservoirs for secretions CBC/BIOCHEMISTRY/URINALYSIS Infection normally evacuated by compression during Use of appropriate oral antibiotics: cephalexin defecation. Normal gland secretions vary Impaction/Infection Usually normal. (dog, 22ā30 mg/kg q12h), amoxicillin widely in consistency and color. Disorders trihydrateāclavulanate potassium (dog, include impaction, infection/sacculitis, and Neoplasia 13.75 mg/kg q12h; cat, 62.5 mg/cat q12h), neoplasia. Treatment options include Hypercalcemiaāanal sac adenocarcinoma. clindamycin (dog, 11ā22 mg/kg q24h; cat, manual expression, flushing, antibiotics, and 11ā30 mg/kg q24h), trimethoprimāsul- OTHER LABORATORY TESTS surgical excision. famethoxasole (dog, 15 mg/kg q12h); None unless indicated by an underlying cause. SIGNALMENT metronidazole (dog, 15ā25 mg/kg q12ā24h); IMAGING Impaction/Infection enrofloxacin (dog, 10ā20 mg/kg q24h), None unless indicated by an underlying cause. Dogs and cats (rarely)āno age or sex orbifloxacin (dog/cat, 5 mg/kg q24h). DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES predisposition. Breeds predisposed CONTRAINDICATIONS/POSSIBLE Digital palpation of anal sacsāshould not be (impaction)āsmaller breeds (miniature/toy INTERACTIONS palpable externally. Expression of anal sac poodle, Chihuahua, American cocker and Trimethoprimāsulfamethoxasoleā contentsāvaries widely in gross appearance and English springer spaniel). Dobermans highly susceptible to type III microscopic characteristics. Cytology (normal Neoplasia dogs/cats)āone study reports Gram-positive hypersensitivity reactions. AdenocarcinomaāEnglish cocker spaniel cocci/rods, Gram-negative cocci/rods, yeast, most commonly reported. nondegenerate neutrophils without phagocytosis, SIGNS mononuclear cells, and corneocytes; erythrocytes uncommonly found in dogs, rare in cats. Another Impaction/Infection study had similar findings but with intracellular Ā FOLLOW-UP Anal/perianal pruritusāoften manifested bacteria in clinically normal dog anal sacs. Impaction/Infection by āscooting.ā Hesitancy to defecate. Reassess patients weekly initially, then as Tenesmus. Tail chasing. Foul-smelling, Impaction/Infection Cytologyāno statistically significant necessary to monitor healing. Manually nonfeces anal discharge. Refusal to sit and/ express anal sac contents and/or flush contents or lift tail. Catsāexcessive licking of the difference in bacterial counts or inflammatory cells found between normal dogs and those with until sacs empty without intervention. ventral abdomen and tail head. Abscessā Trimethoprimāsulfamethoxasoleāmonitor often unilateral; localized pain and discharge. clinical signs of anal sac disease. Bacterial culture and susceptibilityāBacillus, Escherichia tear production, liver function; affects thyroid Neoplasia coli, Micrococcus, Proteus mirabilis, Streptococcus serum values. Mass or swelling in perianal region. spp., others possible. Tenesmus, constipation, polyuria/polydipsia (due to hypercalcemia with adenocarcinoma). Neoplasia L4-Cd myelopathy reported in one cat Surgical excision with histopathology. (adenocarcinoma). Ā MISCELLANEOUS CAUSES & RISK FACTORS SEE ALSO Adenocarcinoma, Anal Sac Impaction/Infection Perianal Fistula Predisposing factorsāchanges in muscle Ā TREATMENT tone, fecal form (soft stool/diarrhea), secretion ĀSuggested Reading Impaction/Infection Helton Rhodes KA, Werner A. Blackwellās character/volume leading to decreased/lack of Gentle manual expression and/or flushing of expression; intestinal disease, obesity, endocrine Five-Minute Veterinary Consult: Clinical contents. Sedation may be necessary to flush Companion: Small Animal Dermatology, 3rd disease. Infection/abscessāchronic or severely impacted or painful anal sacs. recurrent impactions. ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2018. Feeding high-fiber diets may help natural James DJ, Griffin CE, Polissar NL, Neradilek expression of anal sacs. Identification of MB. Comparison of anal sac cytological underlying causes of predisposing disease. findings and behaviour in clinically normal Chronic diseaseāanal sac excision. dogs and those affected with anal sac Infectionāinfusion of antibiotic and/or Ā DIAGNOSIS corticosteroid medications directly into the anal disease. Vet Derm 2010, 22:80ā87. Author Heather D. Edginton DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS sacs, drainage of abscesses, use of appropriate Consulting Editor Alexander H. Werner Impaction/Infection/Neoplasia oral antibiotics and/or antiyeast medication. Resnick Hypersensitivity (flea, atopy, food). Neoplasia Acknowledgment The author acknowledges Tapeworm infestation. Tail fold bacterial Surgical excision and staging; combine with the prior contribution of Alexander H. folliculitis. Malassezia dermatitis. chemotherapy. Werner Resnick.