Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine (May 2022)

Medical and surgical management of pancreatic fluid accumulations in dogs: A retrospective study of 15 cases

  • Charles T. Talbot,
  • Ring Cheung,
  • Emma J. Holmes,
  • Simon D. Cook

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16411
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36, no. 3
pp. 919 – 926

Abstract

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Abstract Background Limited data exist on the diagnosis and successful medical management of suspected pancreatic abscessation, and the appropriate terminology of this condition. Hypothesis/Objectives To describe the diagnosis and management of pancreatic fluid accumulations in dogs where pancreatic fluid cytology results were available, to describe those medically and surgically managed at the same institution, and reconsider the terminology describing acute pancreatitis with pancreatic fluid accumulation. Animals Fifteen dogs treated for suspected pancreatic abscessation at a university teaching hospital between January 2010 and March 2020. Methods Retrospective descriptive study. Results Ultrasonographic findings described pancreatic fluid accumulations as hypoechoic in 10/15 and anechoic in 2/15 cases, ranging between 1.6 and 7 cm in diameter (median, 3.5 cm). No complications were documented after ultrasound guided fine‐needle aspiration. Cytologically, all samples revealed a predominantly neutrophilic inflammation. 11/15 samples yielded a negative culture (9/11 received antimicrobials before sampling) and in 4 cases culture was positive. 7/15 were initially managed surgically including all 4 infected cases. 4/7 surgically managed cases were discharged, including 2 infected cases. The remaining 3/7 surgically managed cases were euthanized due poor quality of life. 8/15 cases were managed medically; 7/8 were discharged, 1 died. 3/7 then represented, and underwent successful surgical intervention after recrudescence of clinical signs, and all were discharged. The remaining 4 medically managed cases did not require further therapeutic intervention, with no clinical deterioration on reassessment. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Medical management is a viable treatment option for some dogs with pancreatic fluid accumulation, or as a prequel to surgical management. Subclassifications of pancreatic fluid accumulations using diagnostic findings could enable more tailored management approaches and accurate prognostication.

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