Cargando…

A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report

An 11-year-old mare presented 36 hours after foaling with a ruptured bladder. Uroperitoneum was diagnosed on ultrasound and from the creatinine concentration of the peritoneal fluid. Bladder endoscopy demonstrated tissue necrosis and a rent in the dorsocranial aspect of the bladder. Following stabil...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stephen, JO, Harty, MS, Hollis, AR, Yeomans, JM, Corley, KTT
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3113760/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21851726
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-0481-62-11-734
_version_ 1782205964715294720
author Stephen, JO
Harty, MS
Hollis, AR
Yeomans, JM
Corley, KTT
author_facet Stephen, JO
Harty, MS
Hollis, AR
Yeomans, JM
Corley, KTT
author_sort Stephen, JO
collection PubMed
description An 11-year-old mare presented 36 hours after foaling with a ruptured bladder. Uroperitoneum was diagnosed on ultrasound and from the creatinine concentration of the peritoneal fluid. Bladder endoscopy demonstrated tissue necrosis and a rent in the dorsocranial aspect of the bladder. Following stabilisation, including abdominal drainage and lavage, the mare was taken to standing surgery. Under continuous sedation and epidural anaesthesia, and after surgical preparation, a Balfour retractor was placed in the vagina. Using sterile lubricant and moderate force, it was possible to insert a hand into the bladder. The tear was easily palpable on the dorsal portion of the bladder. Two fingers were inserted through the tear and used to provide traction to evert the bladder completely into the vagina where it could grasped with the surgeons other hand to prevent further trauma. A second surgeon could then visualise the entire tear and repaired this using a single layer of size zero PDS suture in a single continuous pattern. As soon as the bladder was repaired, it was replaced via the urethra. The mare did well after surgery and was discharged after 48 hours, apparently normal. This report is the first describing repair of the bladder without an abdominal incision or incision into the urethral sphincter. This greatly reduces the chance of possible complications such as urine pooling after surgery with the previously described standing technique or bladder trauma due to traction with abdominal surgery.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3113760
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-31137602011-06-14 A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report Stephen, JO Harty, MS Hollis, AR Yeomans, JM Corley, KTT Ir Vet J Case Report An 11-year-old mare presented 36 hours after foaling with a ruptured bladder. Uroperitoneum was diagnosed on ultrasound and from the creatinine concentration of the peritoneal fluid. Bladder endoscopy demonstrated tissue necrosis and a rent in the dorsocranial aspect of the bladder. Following stabilisation, including abdominal drainage and lavage, the mare was taken to standing surgery. Under continuous sedation and epidural anaesthesia, and after surgical preparation, a Balfour retractor was placed in the vagina. Using sterile lubricant and moderate force, it was possible to insert a hand into the bladder. The tear was easily palpable on the dorsal portion of the bladder. Two fingers were inserted through the tear and used to provide traction to evert the bladder completely into the vagina where it could grasped with the surgeons other hand to prevent further trauma. A second surgeon could then visualise the entire tear and repaired this using a single layer of size zero PDS suture in a single continuous pattern. As soon as the bladder was repaired, it was replaced via the urethra. The mare did well after surgery and was discharged after 48 hours, apparently normal. This report is the first describing repair of the bladder without an abdominal incision or incision into the urethral sphincter. This greatly reduces the chance of possible complications such as urine pooling after surgery with the previously described standing technique or bladder trauma due to traction with abdominal surgery. BioMed Central 2009-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3113760/ /pubmed/21851726 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-0481-62-11-734 Text en
spellingShingle Case Report
Stephen, JO
Harty, MS
Hollis, AR
Yeomans, JM
Corley, KTT
A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report
title A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report
title_full A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report
title_fullStr A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report
title_full_unstemmed A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report
title_short A non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report
title_sort non-invasive technique for standing surgical repair of urinary bladder rupture in a post-partum mare: a case report
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3113760/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21851726
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-0481-62-11-734
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenjo anoninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT hartyms anoninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT hollisar anoninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT yeomansjm anoninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT corleyktt anoninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT stephenjo noninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT hartyms noninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT hollisar noninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT yeomansjm noninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport
AT corleyktt noninvasivetechniqueforstandingsurgicalrepairofurinarybladderruptureinapostpartummareacasereport