Lab Final: Alimentary Flashcards
MDx: Ulcerative
gastritis
Pathogenesis: NSAID overdose(prostaglandins),uremiaPossible clinical signs: melanina(digested blood)
Mysanethia graves,
Vitamin E deficency- results in brown gut/bowel syndrome- Lipfusion
MDx: Teeth dental calculus (plaque)
Mdx: Proliferative gastrisis; or Muti-focal ulcearation
Etiology: Gastrophilius spp.
Mdx: proliferative enteristis (something - marcrophages are being added)
Jejunum granulomatous enteristic
Mycobacterium
Esophagus normal herringbone pattern
MDx: Ulceration and rupture
Et: Ulcer
Consquences: bacterial perinoitis, sepsis, colic
Edx: Ascardial enteritis or parasitic enteritis
Mdx: Catarrhal enteritis
Mutlifocal to coalescing necrotizing (ulcerative)
gastristis (gastric ulcers is also ok)
Why? NSAID, stress
Llama- normal rumen
MDx: Necro-hemorrageic Mutifocal segmental enteritis
Disease: Canine parvoviral enteritis
MDx:
tongue- ulcerative glossitis
esophagus- ulcerative esophagitis
Etiology- Bovine viral diarrhea(BVD pestivirus)
Can see lesions in oral cavity, peyer’s patches, in the rumen
MDx: Reticulum lymphosarcoma
Etx- BoLV- Bovine leukemia virus (retrovirus)- CAN GO ANYWHERE!
key- whitish(because they are WBC- homogenous round cell tumors) blunging area- looks like lymphoma on a cross section
Age of the animal- Over 2 years-
MDx: Mutifocal granulomatous vascultis/peritonistis
Et: FIP (mutated feline coronavirus)
Antigen/antibodies
deposted in the blood vessel wall
Key- nodules covering the SI