Introduction Flashcards
1
Q
Name some clinical signs of gastric and oesophageal disease
A
- Vomiting
- Regurgitation
- Nausea
- Poor appetite
- Increased appetite
- Abdominal pain
- Abdominal distension
- Weight loss
2
Q
What are the indications for endoscopy?
A
- Suspected oesophageal obstruction
- foreign body
- radiopaque (bone)
- radiolucent/soft tissue opacity (potato, dog chew)
- stricture
- mass lesions: rare in dogs and cats
- intraluminal
- benign: leiomyoma, extra medullary plasmacytoma
- malignant: squamous cell or adenocarcinoma
- paraoesophageal (compressing or invading the oesophagus)
- thyroid carcinoma
- heart base tumour
- thymoma/mediastinal lymphoma
- Pain associated with eating when no oral lesions identified (and no response to symptomatic treatment)
- oesophageal ulceration?
- Suspected gastric foreign body
- Severe haematemesis with no coagulopathy identified as the cause
- gastric ulceration?
- Chronic vomiting likely to be of gastrointestinal origin
3
Q
When do you avoid endoscopy?
A
- Damage to the patient
- lubricate the scope
- gentle manipulation- never force the scope
- beware of overinflating the gut
- cardiovascular compromise – block the vena cava
- anaesthetic complications
- Damage to the scope
- keep the scope straight/gentle bend only
- do not drop the scope
- care when using biopsy forceps – must be closed going through the scope! Open outside the scope and then close to bring back in.
- careful cleaning and aftercare
4
Q
Label
A
A) Oesophageal sphincter
B) Fundus
C) Carpus
D) Pylorus
E) Pyloric sphincter
F) Cardia
5
Q
What are the pros and cons of endoscopy?
A