Equine Oral/Esophageal Dz PDF

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CuteHeliodor

Uploaded by CuteHeliodor

University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine

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equine animal health veterinary medicine digestive system

Summary

This document provides a guide to equine oral and esophageal diseases. It covers anatomy, contributing factors to dental issues, complications of dental procedures, esophageal obstructions and clinical signs. This guide also discusses diagnostic methods, treatment options and prevention strategies for these conditions.

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654 ● ● Equine Oral/Esophageal Dz ○ Anatomy contributing to dental problems ■ Foals 6d, 6w, 6m rule ● Central, intermediate, corner incisors come in ■ Lower jaw 25% narrower, overgrowth where teeth don't contact ■ Canines males only ○ Malocclusion ■ Uneven tooth wear ■ Points, hooks, wave mouth, s...

654 ● ● Equine Oral/Esophageal Dz ○ Anatomy contributing to dental problems ■ Foals 6d, 6w, 6m rule ● Central, intermediate, corner incisors come in ■ Lower jaw 25% narrower, overgrowth where teeth don't contact ■ Canines males only ○ Malocclusion ■ Uneven tooth wear ■ Points, hooks, wave mouth, stepped molar arcade ○ Oral exam ■ 1-2x yearly for mature horses ■ Restraint, sedation, and speculum all critical ■ Palpate teeth, look at them all ■ Many dental dz prevented with care and diet ■ Wolf teeth vestigial PM1 ● Check top and bottom! ■ Retained premolars ○ Dental Sx ■ Many risks, $$, post-op complications ○ Esophageal obstruction (choke) ■ Risk factors ● masticatory/dental probs ● Stricture, diverticulum, perforation, esophagitis, neoplasia ● Cranial ⅔ striated mm, distal ⅓ smooth m ■ Clinical signs ● Nasal discharge (food, mucopurulent) ● Cough, pain, wt loss ■ Dx-NG tube, contrast esophogram ■ Tx ● May resolve on its own ● Gentle NG tube intubation ● Oxytocin to reduce skeletal m tone (proximal ⅓) ● Buscopan SM relaxation (distal) ● Sx esophagostomy ● #1 complication aspiration pneumonia ● Manage w/slow feeding, dental care, quality food ● Esophagitis Tx motility agents, (Bethanechol) ● Neoplasia= RARE Intro FA GI Dz/Individual Assessment ○ Anatomy/physiology ■ Rumen most of L side cow ■ Abomasum lower R quadrant ■ Omental curtain hangs over organs ■ Liver R side, spleen L side ○ PE techniques ■ Ballotment ■ ■ ■ ■ ● Auscultation Auscultation-percussion Sucussion Rectal palpation! ● Can feel lots of organs ○ GI system response ■ Low-threshold receptors INcrease rumen motility ● Pass stomach tube ■ High-threshold receptors DEcrease motility ■ Elevated Cl= abomasal reflux ○ GI clinical signs ■ Abd distension, pain, diarrhea, reduced fecal output ■ Wt loss, inappetence, bottle jaw Ruminant GI Dz ○ Exam ■ Gum color, pointed papilla ■ Intact palate Poison hemlock, nicotine ingestion ● Signs of regurg milk ■ Dentition ● Central incisors at 18mo (cattle show anecdote) ○ Dx= reportable, aggressive disinfection, insect control, zoonosis risk ■ Vesicular lesions ● Blisters, salivation ● Ddx FMD, VS ● 3-5d incubation, coronary band lesions ■ Malignant catarrhal fever ● Viral mainly in sheep ● Erosions, mucopurulent exudate ● Early corneal opacity ■ Bluetongue ● Sheep ● Hemorrhagic Dz in deer ● Photosensitization ■ Rinderpest globally eradicated ■ Contagious Ecthyma (ORF)= poxvirus ● Zoonotic target lesion ● Risk of condition loss w/discomfort ● PCR ● Scarification vxn, careful ■ Woody tongue ● Actinobacillus lignieresii, sulfer granules ● Tx sodium iodide ● Gram neg ■ Lumpy jaw ● Actinomyces bovis ● Gram pos ● Presumptive Dx ● Tx sodium iodide, Abx ● Poultry GI ○ Enteric Dz ■ Rotavirus ● Chickens may be subclinical ● Dilated intestines yellow, frothy, watery contents ● No vxn/tx ■ Reovirus ● Arthritic symptoms ■ Astrovirus ● Avian nephritis virus ● White chicks condition ■ Coronavirus ● Green-brown, watery frothy droppings in turkeys ● No vxn, tx ■ Clostridial ● Necrotic enteritis ■ Change in gut flora predisposed ■ Ballooned friable brown intestines ■ Prevention w/abx for coccidiosis ● Ulcerative enteritis ○ Clostridium colinum in quail ○ Chickens recover in 2-3wk ○ Neoplasia ■ Marek’s Dz= herpes ● All flocks assumed infected ● Enlarged nn, atrophic bursa, diffuse lymphoid tumors ■ Lymphoid leukosis ● Lifelong carriers shedding ● Bursal tumors ● Depopulation control ○ Nervous system ■ Encephalomalacia from Vit E deficiency ● Muscular dystrophy in mature birds ■ Avian encephalomyelitis ● head/neck tremors ■ Botulism= flaccid paralysis, no lesions ○ Systemic Dz ■ Fowl cholera ● Pastuerella multocida, v contagious ○ Swollen face/wattles ■ Salmonella ● Pullorum Dz ● Diffuse grey nodules ■ Fowl typhoid, paratyphoid ■ Colibacillosis ● E. coli ■ Erysipelas ● Acute sudden death ● Live vaccine 2-3wk split ■ ● ● Infectious bursal Dz (Gumboro) ● Immunosuppression ■ Gout ● Urate deposits ○ Parasitic Dz ■ Mites ■ Helminths ● Rotate ground, deworm ■ Coccidiosis ● E. tenella high mortality, bloody feces, cecal blood ■ Histomoniasis ● Liver and cecal target lesions ○ Pododermatitis Population FA GI Health ○ Infectious and non-infectious GI signs look the same ■ Root causes are multifactorial ● Nutrition, housing, normal flora, pathogens ○ Assessment=measuring=counting ■ Track by case definitions ■ Intervene early in an epi curve ○ Causes by life stage ■ Management of FA GI health ○ Rumen fermentation ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ■ VFA= cow for energy N=cow for protein Saliva as buffer Contractions ■ primary=mixing ■ secondary=eructation Health metrics ■ Appetite, production, contraction rate, rumen metrics, manure Cow-calf= 80%+ forage ○ ● ● Stocker= 35-65% grain ■ Avoid acidosis ○ Feedlot finisher= 80%+ grain ■ Diff rumen, manure ○ Lactating dairy= 50% grain, high dry matter ■ 3.5-4% milk fat in Holsteins ○ Non-lactating dairy= 80%+ forage and straw ■ Just barely maintaining to avoid preg issues ○ Displaced Abomasum ■ Nutritional cause ■ Subclinical ketosis, hypocalcemia ○ Beef cows don’t really get GI issues Forestomach Motility Issues ○ Clinical Signs ■ Papple= large L-shaped rumen ■ Abd fill in spite of poor appetite ○ Differentiate types ■ TRP (Hardware Dz) ● Feed magnet ● Reticulum juice v bad for the peritoneum ● Failed Withers pinch ■ Abomasal impaction (sand, poor quality feed) ● Oral fluids + mineral oil ■ Ruminal tympany (bloat) ● High, left, compressible ● V dangerous ● Tx stomach tube, feed low-bubble surfactant, relieve choke ● Plant ingestion or bacterial overproduction causes ○ Dx plan ■ High rumen CL=abomasal backflow ■ Lymphosarcoma (HULA locations) ○ Tx plan Displaced Abomasums ○ Anatomy ■ LDA= decreased motility and smaller rumen= shift L ■ *RDA= dilation, COUNTERCLOCKWISE rotation ● Fluid accumulation= v bad ○ Risk factors ■ RDA= Holsteins, early lactation, acutely off feed, dramatic production drop ■ LDA=Holsteins, recent calving, decreased production/eating ■ both= peri-parturient Dz, low fiber/high starch diet ● Milk fever, ketosis, metritis ○ Clinical signs ■ LDA= ketotic urine, ping on L ribs 13-18 ■ RDA= generally sick cow, decreased K, Cl on serum chem ○ Ddx ■ RDA= cecal dilatation ○ Tx plan LDA ■ Sx or Toggle, tx ketosis ● ● ○ ● ● ● R flank omentopexy Toggle placement on the side, tack outside the body ○ CHEAPER, FASTER Tx plan RDA ■ R flank laparotomy (deflate, untwist, tack to the body wall) ● Loss of motility poss ● Swoosh RIGHT Infectious enteric dz in cattle ○ Diarrhea as an indicator of GI health ○ Optimized growth= minimizing health problems ○ Managemental neonate diarrhea ■ Improper measurement of milk replacer=inconsistent nutrition ■ milk+grain= best rumen development ○ Infectious neonate diarrhea ■ E. coli ● 2-5d calves, dehydration/electrolyte derangement ■ Salmonella= bloody diarrhea ■ Coronavirus ● Calves <2wk ● Entire villus affected (crypts) ■ Rotavirus ● Calves up to 2wk ● Villus tip blunting ■ Cryptosporidium ● Zoonotic! ● 7-30d calves ● Mucoid diarrhea ● Acid-fast staining Managing infectious enteric dz in cattle ○ Presenting signs of enteric dz ■ Wt loss (chronic) ■ Sudden death (acute) ■ Abd distension (A) ■ Abd pain (A) ■ Reduced performance (C) ■ Pathogen locations ■ ETEC=jejunum ■ EHEC=colon ■ clostridium=abomasum, SI, colon ■ Rotavirus=SI ■ coronavirus=SI, colon ■ Crypto=ileum ■ coccidia=ileum, LI Eq gastric ulcers ○ EGUS in most broodmares, performance horses ○ Dx= response to Tx, endoscopy (only definitive) ○ Risk factors ■ Intense exercise, poor diet management (high concentrate) ○ Adults ○ ○ ○ ● ● ● ■ Foals ■ Path ■ ■ ■ Tx ■ Poor appetite, BCS, performance Colic, laying on back, bruxism Aggressive factors>defenses damage gastric lining Squamous mucosal lesions from increase acids (80% ulcers) Glandular mucosal lesions from impaired mucosal protection medication= control gastric acid (neutralizers, antisecretory), mucosal protectants ● Prostaglandins decrease acid ● Gastrogard=acid pump inhibitor ● Compounded omeprazole=bad for concentration, degradation ■ control= reduce training/stress, limit fasting, increase roughage, reduce grain ○ Duodenal ulcer/stricture ■ Foals, Tx gastrojejunostomy Abomasal disorders ○ Ulceration ■ Stress, diet, high grain ■ Hospitalized camelids high risk ■ Tx buffers, decrease acid production ○ tympany/abomasitis ■ >2wk bottle fed calves ■ Bacterial overgrowth C. perfringens type A ● Off feed w/o diarrhea, ‘slosh’ in abomasum ● Tx PPG PO, C. perf anti-toxin C&D ■ prevention=feeding management (small meals frequently) Ruminal acidosis ○ Risk factors ■ Sudden change in amount or type of CHO ■ Grain type fed, processing (moisture, particle size) ○ Ruminal changes ■ Excess starch & sugar= rapid fermentation ● Shift in microbial pop ● Increased lactate production= decreased pH ■ ACUTE= life-threatening ○ Clinical signs ■ Anorexia, bloat, watery diarrhea, death ○ Dx=Rumen pH <5, no living protozoa in rumen fluid ○ Tx=Stop fermentation & remove VFAs ■ Evacuate contents, +/- give PPG ■ Neutralize rumen pH, feed hay ○ Sequelae= liver abscessation Eq Small intestine ○ Gastric impaction ■ Dry feed, decreased water-> coke at Tx ○ Gastric neoplasia ■ SCC ● ● ■ Chronic wt loss, anemia, colic ■ Endoscopy ○ Anterior enteritis (AE) ■ Marked inflammation of SI ■ Adult horses on a high level of nutrition ■ Large nasogastric reflex ■ Dx intestinal distension on US, tap peritoneal fluid, explore ■ Tx decompress tube, fluid & electrolytes IV, flunixin meglumine ○ IBD ■ Thickened bowel, enlarged mesenteric LN; failure to absorb glucose ■ Path~ altered immune response ■ Tx steroids, good high-energy feeds ○ Intestinal neoplasia ■ Wt loss and r/o everything else ■ Grave prognosis ○ Lawsonia intracellularis ■ Equine proliferative enteropathy ■ Lethargy, edema, colic, wt loss, diarrhea ■ Dx thickened SI wall on US, hypoproteinemia ■ Tx clarithromycin, doxycycline ○ Equine coronavirus ■ Fecal-oral, self-resolving in 1wk ● Farm outbreaks ~3wk Equine Colitis ○ Enterocolitis sequelae ■ Sudden massive fluid loss, electrolyte imbalance ■ Gram negs in gut>>endotoxin sources, v sensitive ■ Poss hyperammonemia ○ Stress triggers ○ Foals-Pasty diarrhea associated with bacteremia ○ Salmonella=zoonotic ■ Should always be ruled out ○ Clostridium= normal flora ■ Send good amount of feces fast for ID ○ Tx ■ Correct fluid/electrolyte loss, tx endotoxemia ● Tx for loss, ongoing losses, and maintenance ● No IV sodium bicarb ● Plasma expanders for decreased pressure ○ Other plasma goodies help ● Endotoxins set off inflammation ○ Steroids, flunixin ○ Ice those feet Equine liver dz ○ Hepatic insufficiency= 80% damage (can be subclinical) ○ Clinical signs ■ Wt loss, anorexia, icterus, hepatoencephalopathy, coagulopathy, edema ● Depression, circling, head pressing, hyperammonemia ○ CSF, serum ● ○ Dx ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ○ GLDH and SDH liver values GGT=cholestasis Bile acids for presence, not type of dz Liver u/s Biopsy R side ICS 12-14 Tx ■ ● Secondary photosensitization hyperammonemia= lactulose (pH change), metronidazole (reduce bact byproducts) ■ Support until liver regenerates ● Fluids, acid-base, nutrition (high carb low protein) ■ Hyperlipemia ● Correct primary dz ● Correct neg energy balance ● Exogenous insulin- suppress hormone-sensitive lipase, increase lipoprotein lipase ● Exogenous heparin- stimulate lipoprotein lipase and promote TG metabolism ○ Chronic Megalocytc Hepatopathy ■ Magalocytosis, biliary hyperplasia, fibrosis ○ Cholelithiasis ■ Icterus, fever, colic ■ Increase bile acids, globulins ○ Tyzzer’s Dz ■ Clostridium piliforme ■ Acute necrotizing hepatitis, high mortality ○ Theiler’s Dz ■ 4-10wk reaction to equine biologics ■ Acute hepatic necrosis ○ Chronic active hepatitis ■ Tx corticosteroids, Abx Eq GI Sx 1 ○ colic=pain (symptom, not sign) ■ Stretch, tension, inflammation, infarction ■ Ddx myositis, laminitis, ataxia ○ Anatomy ■ Ileocecal fold ○ Gastric ulcers ■ Adult signs= off feed, foal sign= colic, bruxism ○ Gastric impaction ■ Risk factors sugar beet pulp persimmon seeds, dental dz ○ SI strangulating lesion ■ Epiploic foramen entrapment (L to R, cribbing) ■ pedunculated lipoma on mesenteric pedicle (older horses) ■ Intussusception (-cipiens receives) ■ Hernia ● adults=acquired, short loop, irreducible ○ SI non-strangulating lesion ■ ■ ■ ● ● ● Ileal impaction ● Coastal bermuda grass hay, tapeworms ascarid impaction (parascaris equorum in foals <6mo) proximal enteritis ● Hella nasogastric reflux, may need Sx if big pain Eq GI Sx 2 ○ Large colon tympany and impaction most common colic ○ Impactions can be managed if caught quick, but need Sx for pain ○ Focal obstructions always need Sx ○ Large colon displacement or volvulus ■ Volvulus needs Sx ASAP ○ Bowel rupture big risk ■ Be gentle ■ Gas, impaction, or both ○ Rectal tears will get you sued ■ Careful with expensive horses ■ Low-grade tears heal fine, bad ones may result in euthanasia Eq GI Sx 3 ○ Pain is #1 reason to go to Sx ○ Exploratory laparotomy is best method to ID lesions ■ But not all can be fixed ○ Gentle tissue handling of bowel is key ○ Resectioning depends on length and severity of damage ○ Most common post-op issues ■ Recurrent pain/colic ■ Incision infection/drainage ■ Pain and ileus are reasons to go back in ○ SI lesions typically do worse than LI lesions ■ If survive to discharge, good odds ○ Laparoscopy is fancy, but expensive. Needs training and many people to use Swine clinical approach ○ Pathogen presence does not mean disease necessarily ○ Separate By: ■ -Age ● diff receptors with age=diff dz/severity ● pH drops post-weaning>fewer bugs ■ Anatomical location ● -ileocecocolic junction as the border SI/LI ● LI dz=watery stool, high vol ● SI dz=undigested feed, fat, some water in stool ○ Ileal lesion=protein loss ○ Colic lesion=water loss ○ Duodenal lesion=basic stools ● Jejunum ○ Rotavirus=mature enterocytes ■ Mild blunting ○ Coronavirus=immature enterocytes ■ Severe villus blunting ○ Coccidia= lamina propria under crypt cells ■ ■ ■ Focal ○ E coli (F18/K88) ■ Functional dz (hypersecretory) ■ Shiga toxin (edema dz, leaky vessels) ● Brain swelling, neuro signs ○ Lawsonia=physical dz ■ Ileum dz ■ PPE=young, proliferation ■ PHE=adult, pipestream blood (mucosal sloughing) mechanism of Dz ● Malabsorption ○ degree of villus blunting=degree of dz ○ physical damage can be seen on histo ○ Results in metabolic acidosis ● Hypersecretory ○ altered phys (electrolytes, etc) ○ increased water in the lumen (functional change) ○ E. coli ■ Fimbriae ■ Toxin ○ Clostridium ■ Dificile=LI ■ Perf A,C=SI, blood/acute death (nephrotoxin C) LI environmental bugs ● Salmonella ○ Toxin, colitis (button ulcers) ○ Oral Abx ● Roundworms ○ Liver milk spot scarring ● Whipworms in the colon ○ fenbendazole

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