Lit Respiratory Flashcards

1
Q

Describe:
a) The genetic disorder of the larynx that Norwich Terriers are predisposed to, and the
b) Causal gene mutation
c) Clinical manifestations
d) Management strategies

A

Johnson JVIM 2021
a) Normal nares and palate, but excessive supraglottic tissue & a narrow key hole or V-shaped lumen in the immediate infraglottic region –> narrowed laryngeal opening increases resistance to airflow, which could augment soft tissue swelling in the oropharynx.

b) ADAMTS3 metallopeptidase enzyme - responsible for promotion of lymphangiogenesis (–> lymphedema & soft tissue swelling).

c) Mimics clinical features of classic BOAS. Stertor or stridor. Range of clinical severity - relatively asymptomatic (despite marked morphological changes) to marked resp distress.

d) Sx - ventriculectomy

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2
Q

What scoring system was established for Norwich terriers predisposed to a genetic laryngeal disorder? What correlations did this scoring system have with quality of life?

A

Johnson JVIM 2021
Norwich terriers affected by an upper airway syndrome (NTUAS) scoring system. Based on # & severity of obstructive lesions detected endoscopically (range 0-25).
No correlation - 81% dogs had excellent QOL </= 3 (range 0-40, higher worse), with worse scores in dogs that underwent sx.

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3
Q

What gene mutation was identified in a juvenile schnauzer with chronic respiratory tract infections, and what are the pathophysiologic effects?

A

Hedgespeth JVIM 2021
Deleterious missense A/C mutation within the NAT10 gene, gene essential for microtubule acetylation, appropriate ciliary development, and cytokinesis (reported in humans with ciliary aplasia).

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4
Q

When comparing cytology & culture results of ET and TT washes in dogs with respiratory disease, what was the proportion of discordant results (i.e. cytology positive/culture negative and cytology negative/culture positive)?

A

Graham JVIM 2021
Cytology +/culture - discordancy was uncommon (8%). Cytology -/culture + discordancy was frequent (55.4%) but occurred less often (14.2%) when only growth >/=1+ was considered positive (i.e. light growth common even when cytology -)
–> Presence of bacteria on cytology was a good predictor of any growth, while their absence was a good predictor of the absence of growth of 1+ or more.

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5
Q

What were the 2 outcomes of using undiluted 5% gentamicin nebulisation in dogs with B. bronchiseptica infection compared to use of diluted gentamicin?

Dogs treated with undiluted gentamicin nebulisation & ……… in lavage were more likely to be cured at 3-4 weeks & have a shorter duration of treatment.

A

Cannone JVIM 2020

Higher rate of clinical cure at 3-4 weeks (defined as absence of cough for min 1 week).
Shorter median duration of treatment (4 vs 6 weeks).

<1000 cells/uL

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6
Q

When evaluating the utility of blood and BALF matrix metalloproteinase activities in WHWTs with chronic idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (CIPF) vs healthy WHWTs/other breeds & dogs with other respiratory diseases,
Serum & BALF MMPs may be useful as ….. markers but not …. markers for CIPF.
CIPF WHWTs had significantly higher activities of ……….. in serum; higher BALF ……… activities compared to dogs with chronic bronchitis (CB), and higher BALF ……..activities compared to dogs with CB & eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy.

A

Määttä JVIM 2020

Diagnostic, prognostic

Pro-MMP-7; pro-MMP-9; pro-MMP-2

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7
Q

Amongst shelter dogs, dogs with signs of canine infectious respiratory disease complex (CIRDC) had serum [25(OH)D] that was ….ng/mL higher/lower than healthy shelter dogs.
Dogs positive for …… had lower serum [25(OH)D] compared to dogs that tested negative.
Serum [25(OH)D] differed/did not differ between shelter and non-shelter dogs.
Serum [25(OH)D] was significantly associated/not associated with duration of time in the shelter.

A

Jaffey JVIM 2020
7.3ng/mL, lower
CHV-1 DNA
Did not differ
Not associated

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8
Q

Name 3 most common presenting signs in dogs with pulmonary hypertension.

A

Johnson JVIM 2020
Syncope (64%), cough (56%), respiratory difficulty (32%)

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9
Q

Common disease conditions associated with PH in dogs?

A

Johnson JVIM 2020
Tracheobronchomalacia, pulmonary fibrosis, inflammatory airway disease, brachycephalic syndrome; multiple disorders in some dogs.

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10
Q

What was the a) clinical response and b) survival outcome for dogs with respiratory-associated PH treated with sildanefil?

A

Johnson JVIM 2020
a) Variable. Dogs surviving >1mth had significantly improved tricuspid regurgitation pressure gradient (83.0 > 55.4mmHg) & QOL.
b) 32% mortality (death or euthanasia) within 1 month. 50% mortality at 6 months. 16% long-term survival (>/= 5yrs post-diagnosis).

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11
Q

a) Inflammatory airway disease in cats – differences between asthma & chronic bronchitis?

b) Name a clinical feature that may be useful in differentiating cats with asthma & chronic bronchitis.

A

Lee JVIM 2020
a) Asthma – increased airway responsiveness & bronchoconstriction. Manifested by acute wheezing or respiratory difficulty, which is reversible by bronchodilator tx. Likely results from exposure to allergens. Classified by eosinophilic airway inflammation. Chronic bronchitis – presence of cough. Bronchoconstriction is not part of the clinical picture. Characterised by non-septic suppurative airway inflammation in response to an unknown insult.

b) Age – cats with eosinophilic inflammation were significantly younger (4.4yrs) than those with neutrophilic inflammation (8yrs).

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12
Q

a) Tracheal stenting decreases the rate of pathogenic infections in geriatric dogs & dogs with traditional-type collapse (TTC) by ……% and …..% respectively.

b) Prior to stent placement, which 2 groups of dogs had higher % of positive pathogenic airway infections?
1. Geriatric dogs
2. Malformation-type collapse (MTC) dogs
3. Traditional-type collapse (TTC) dogs
4. Younger dogs

c) What are the risk factors for development of pathogenic infections in dogs undergoing tracheal stent placement?

A

Lesnikowski JVIM 2020
a) 52% & 56%

b) Geriatric (61%) & traditional-type collapse (TTC) dogs (62%) – vs young (32%) & malformation-type collapse (MTC) dogs (33%).

c) History of pneumonia (OR 3.6) & cardiac dz (OR 1.25) in geriatric dogs; hepatomegaly in young dogs (OR 1.5).

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13
Q

What were the significant changes noted in tracheal diameter immediately & longer term post placement of an intraluminal stent in dogs with tracheal collapse?
Was stent migration a significant complication at any time point?

A

Raske JVIM 2018
Immediate - 21% in intra-thoracic tracheal diameter (~5% for remaining). Longer term - mean % change ranged from 2.5-15% along cervico-thoracic trachea.
Minimal stent shortening overall.
No clinically relevant stent migration in this study.

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14
Q

Describe the differences in cats with aspiration pneumonia when compared to cats with bronchopneumonia or IAD in terms of:
- Clinical features
- Duration of clinical signs
- Radiographic findings
- BAL microbiology results

A

Dear JVIM 2020
- AP cats less likely to present with cough & more likely hypothermic vs cats with BP or IAD. Usually present as acute onset tachypnea.
- AP cats had significantly shorter median duration of signs (12d) vs BP cats (270d) or IAD cats (180d).
- Radiographically, more likely to have an alveolar pattern & higher total severity score in AP cats vs BP/IAD cats.
- BAL culture results: none had Mycoplasma cultured in AP cats, but Mycoplasma spp. most common organisms cultured from BP cats.

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15
Q

How do storage conditions impact aerobic bacterial culture results of BALF in dogs?

A

Curran JVIM 2020
BALF samples may be stored at 4degC for 24hrs before culture w/o substantially altering culture results.
But inappropriate storage (room temperature or exposure to heat) can result in overgrowth of E. coli or B. bronchiseptica - can alter clinical decisions.

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16
Q

In dogs undergoing thoracotomy for primary spontaneous pneumothorax, how often did pneumothorax recur post-operatively? In what timeframe was recurrence typically observed?
Risk factors for recurrence?

A

Dickson JAVMA 2021
13% recurrence.
Median 9d post-op; but most within 30d post-op (>30d rare ~3% recurrence).
No risk factors identified.

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17
Q
  1. Indications for tracheal endoluminal stent placement in dogs?
  2. What short-long term benefits did stent placement confer to dogs with tracheal collapse?
A

Congiusta JAVMA 2021
1. Severe tracheal collapse refractory to medical management. Malformation-type TC - stronger indication vs traditional-type TC (dynamic).
2.

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18
Q

What clinical features should prompt suspicion for pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and haemangiomatosis in dogs?

What thoracic imaging findings are expected with these dogs?

Prognosis/survival?

A

Reineiro JVIM 2019

Older dogs (median 11yo, no age/sex predisposition) presenting with acute respiratory distress. Absence of L-sided CHF & other causes of respiratory disease.

R-sided cardiomegaly with patchy-diffuse interstitial to alveolar pulmonary pattern. NB: 60% dogs had L cardiac silhouette. 33% had pulmonary arterial hypertension (may have underestimated %?)
CT - perivascular diffuse nodular ground-glass opacities & PA enlargement

Prognosis guarded, 66% dogs died within 1 day, MST 3days.

NB: histopathologic criteria of PVOD = occlusive remodeling of small-sized to medium-sized pulmonary veins, PCH = alveolar capillary proliferation and congestion).

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19
Q

What is Heliox? How may it affect breathing in brachycephalic dogs?

A

Benavides JVIM 2019

Heliox is an O2/Helium mixture. It has less density than normal air, so promotes laminar air flow.

Use in normal & brachycephalic dogs increased peak inspiratory flow (PIF), peak expiratory flow (PEF) rates & normalised tidal breathing flow-volume loop shapes.
—> Overall improves flow rate & patterns in brachycephalic dogs.

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20
Q

Xxxx
What POCUS findings were consistent with pulmonary oedema in dogs?
Sensitivity & specificity of findings?

A

JAVMA 2019

B line scores 10+ & presence of 2+ sites positive for B lines.
Sn 92%, Spec 94%

(NB: Ward JAVMA 2017 - similar paper evaluating lung POCUS for cardiogenic pulmonary oedema)

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21
Q

What 2 respiratory syndromes are described in Irish Wolfhounds? What are the proposed pathogenetic mechanisms & clinical manifestations?

A

Viitanen JVIM 2019

1) Recurrent bacterial pneumonia (RBP) - MIDDLE-AGE/OLDER IWHs (median 5yo).
Median 5 episodes of BP. Predisposing factors: focal bronchiectasis (10/11) common; less prevalent - uni/bilateral lar par & oesophageal hypomotility.
Local/systemic Ig deficiencies or primary ciliary defects not detected.

2) Unique rhinitis & bronchopneumonia syndrome (RBPS) described in YOUNG IWHs. Variable rhinorrhea present mostly from birth, accompanied by recurrent BP. Clinical picture resembles primary ciliary dyskinesia or primary immune deficiency (possibly IgA deficiency). Hereditary disease.

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22
Q
  1. List 3 major complications associated with endoluminal tracheal stent placement.
  2. What 2 factors increase the risk of caudodorsal tracheal stent fracture?
  3. What factor was associated with obstructed tissue ingrowth & thoracic inlet fractures in these dogs?
A

Violette JVIM 2019
1. Stent fracture (25%), obstructive tissue ingrowth (19%), progressive tracheal collapse (12%).
2. (Natural) tracheal taper, stent diameter oversizing in the intra-thoracic trachea.
3. Tracheal malformations (70% dogs with obstructive tissue ingrowth, 100% dogs with thoracic inlet fractures).

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23
Q
  1. What is the reported MST (including survival to discharge) in dogs with tracheal collapse undergoing stent placement? Positive prognostic factors?
  2. What is the reported major complication rate requiring stent replacement in these dogs?
  3. Clinical response rate?
A

Weisse JAVMA 2019
1. MST 1005 days, with 93% surviving to discharge. Male, younger dogs had significantly longer survival. Mainstem bronchial collapse at time of stent placement NOT sig associated with outcome.
2. Major complications in 47%, with stent fracture and tissue ingrowth being most common.
3. Overall good. Improvement in goose-honking or raspy breathing (89% dogs) & dyspnea (84% dogs).

24
Q

What has increased lymphocytes on BAL fluid (20%+) been associated with in dogs?

A

Johnson JVIM 2019
Eosinophilic airway disease (12.5%), airway neutrophilia of various causes (infectious, inflammatory) & airway collapse (latter significantly more common in dogs with solitary lymphocytosis cf mixed inflammation).

Overall lymphocytosis in BALF is common in dogs & likely represents a common response to airway injury independent of the type or duration of insult.

25
Q

What factors were associated with an increased odds of temporary tracheostomy tube placement in BOAS dogs having surgery?
Did BOAS dogs requiring TTT placement experience higher mortality compared to those that did not?

A

Worth JAVMA 2018

Increasing age (increased odds by 30% per every 1 year increase)
Post-op corticosteroid administration & pneumonia also associated (though likely not causal, but reflective of patient disease severity)

No diff in mortality rate, though TTT dogs required longer hospitalisation duration (also no sig diff in BCS, tracheal diameter-to-thoracic inlet ratio, staphylectomy technique between dogs requiring/not requiring TTT).

26
Q

Was there an association identified between BOAS & CRP+ metabolic profiles in dogs?
(Metabolic profile included fructosamine, insulin, glucose, triglyceride, cholesterol & plasma concentrations of lipoprotein classes)

Name 1 respiratory & 1 non-respiratory disease that were common in these dogs & associated clinical abnormalities?

A

Gianella JVIM 2019
Not in this study. Metabolic derangements & CRP elevations variable.

76% of dogs had GI signs. Most common endoscopic abnormalities - oesophageal deviation, atony of gastric cardia, distal oesophagitis. GI histo - chronic inflammation.
87% dogs had variable laryngeal collapse.

27
Q

How can measurement of acute phase protein (APPs) be used to guide treatment of bacterial pneumonia in dogs?

A

Viitanen JVIM 2017
Normalisation of CRP & SAA used to guide duration of abx treatment - abx continued 5-7 days beyond normalisation (rapid decreases noted after abx started). Shorter tx duration without increasing the number of relapses.

28
Q

BALF bile acids were significantly higher in dogs with what conditions as compared to healthy beagles?

A

Määttä JVIM 2018
WHWTs with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, laryngeal dysfunction & chronic bronchitis. Healthy WHWTs (77%) also had significantly higher BALF bile acids cf healthy Beagles (0%).

29
Q

What marker of air quality was found to be increased in households with cats with respiratory disease?
Risk factors for respiratory disease in dogs?

A

Lin JVIM 2018
Household PM 2.5 level (exposure to particulate matter </= 2.5um).
PM 2.5 >35ug/m3 is considered unacceptable.

For dogs, no sig diff in household PM 2.5 level between dogs with/without respiratory disease. Other risk factors - exposure to incense burning, signalment factors (age, BW, BCS).

30
Q

How did the deposition of fluticasone (as reported by scintigraphy) compare when delivered by nebulisation vs MDI in dogs?

A

Chow JVIM 2017
Nebulization delivered higher deposition (4.2%) & MDI (2.3%).

31
Q

MOA for maropitant?
What is the impact of maropitant on airway disease in dogs?

A

Grobman JVIM 2016
NK-1 receptor antagonist.
NK-1 receptor pathways can induce cough - maropitant reduced cough frequency & VAS (visual analogue scale) by 7 & 14 days. NB: study was not placebo controlled.
No changes in airway inflammation (BAL % Np or Ep).
Overall NOT recommended for management of airway disease.

32
Q

Define bronchiectasis.
What is/are reliable diagnostic method(s) for bronchiectasis?
2 common bronchoscopic findings?
What conditions is bronchiectasis associated with?

A

Johnson JVIM 2016
Definition: progressive & irreversible dilatation of the airways.

Thoracic CT (100%) & bronchoscopy (92%). Radiographs only 60% Sn.

Bronchoscopy: concurrent airway collapse (58%), focal/multifocal mucus plugging of bronchi (48%).

Conditions: infectious (pneumonia), EBP (12%), IAD (36%).
Bacteria isolated in 28% cases - Streps, Pasteurella spp, enteric organisms & Stenotrophomonas (G-, nosocomial) most common.

33
Q

What diagnostic method is favoured for the diagnosis of Bordetella bronchiseptica?
What cytological feature is reliable for the diagnosis of Bb?
Are co-infections common in Bb dogs?

A

Cannone JVIM 2016
BALF quantitative PCR - more sensitive (100%) than culture (58%).

Cytology - visualisation of coccobacilli adherent to ciliated epithelial cells in BALF (95% cases; 20/21) where epithelial cells were present —> reliable & rapid diagnostic tool.

Co-infections with Mycoplasma cynos reported, but not found to be significantly different between Bb & healthy dogs in this study.

34
Q

What % of dogs, presenting for cough and no other URT signs, have laryngeal dysfunction?

A

Johnson JAVMA 2016

19% (paresis or paralysis)

Should perform complete laryngoscopic examination when doing workup for dogs with cough.

35
Q

What dynamic respiratory function test can be used to diagnose BOAS in dogs?
How accurate is this test?
What are the associated characteristics?

A

Liu JVIM 2016
Whole body barometric plethysmography (basically dogs are placed in a chamber & pneumotachographs are attached to the top surface of the chamber)

BOAS index (0-100%) generated from WBBP predicted BOAS status with 94–97% accuracy.

Findings - significantly decreased minute volume, increase in trace variation (clinical higher than asymptomatic dogs). Characteristics differed across breeds (pugs vs Frenchies vs Bulldogs).

36
Q

What is the effect of body condition score & brachycephalic status on thermoregulation & vital parameters (especially respiratory) in dogs?

A

Davis JAVMA 2017
BCS was positively associated with body temperature (independent of breed & environmental conditions); negatively associated with tidal volume.

Brachycephalic dogs had decreased thermoregulatory capacity - greater increase in RR in response to heat stress vs non-brachycephalics.

37
Q

What is the most common post-op complication in dogs with laryngeal paralysis undergoing unilateral arytenoid lateralization? What risk factors were identified?

A

Wilson JAVMA 2016
Aspiration pneumonia.
Risk factors - post-op megaO (HR 2.58), post-op opioid administration (HR 1.69). NOT pre-existing aspiration pneumonia.

38
Q
A
39
Q

What % of cats with pyothorax develop sepsis? What % of these cats present with pyrexia?

A

Epstein VCNA 2020 (Review)
50% sepsis. <50% pyrexia.
(% of dogs with sepsis 2’ to pyothorax unknown)

40
Q

Most common causal organisms of pyothorax in cats vs dogs?

A

Epstein VCNA 2020 (Review)
- Cats: Pasteurella, anaerobes, mycoplasma (not dogs)
- Dogs: Enterobacteria, anaerobes, less common –actinomyces, nocardia, Corynebacterium (not cats), Strep canis, staphs, E coli

41
Q

Is ultrasonography a useful imaging modality to identify migrating intrathoracic grass awns in dogs?

A

Caivano JAVMA 2016
Yes. Transthoracic or transoesophageal US.
Identified pleural space (13/23) or pulmonary parenchyma (10/23) dogs.
Intra-op US also aided localisation of FB in 47% dogs.
16/20 dogs did not have evidence of FB on US at initial presentation, but subsequently had FB identified from sublumbar or thoracic wall on follow up US.

42
Q

(2 papers)
What factors were associated with survival in dogs vs cats undergoing sx for thoracic trauma?

A

Lux JAVMA 2018
Cats
Thoracic sx required in 65% cases.
13% peri-op mortality rate.
Negative px factors - CPA in hospital, higher ATT (animal trauma triage) score (based on lesion categories)

Dogs
Thoracic sx in 78% cases.
15% mortality rate (similar to cats)
Negative px factors - male dogs, CPA in hospital, higher ATT score (<7 had 5x odds of survival vs >7)

43
Q

Is mycoplasma a respiratory tract commensal?
Name 1 bacterial & 1 viral infection that can cause fatal necrotizing hemorrhagic pnuemonia in dogs?

A

Dear VCNA 2020 (review)
Yes (dogs & cats) - UPPER RT
Strep equi subsp zooepidemicus, H3N8 (equine influenza)

44
Q

In a 2010-2012 outbreak of Acinetobacter calcoaceticus–Acinetobacter baumannii complex infections in a teaching hospital, what was the route of transmission? What were the clinical manifestations & prognosis? Clinical implications?

A

Kuzi JSAP 2016
Dogs & cats. Bacteria isolated from urine, RT, tissues & blood. CSx pyrexia, purulent discharge from ET tubes, hypotension, neutropenia.
Infections were transmitted in the ICU (22/23 animals)

70% mortality rate; higher with RTI.
Infection is difficult to eradicate; but incidence reduced by aggressive environmental cleaning and disinfection, & staff education for personal hygiene and antisepsis.

45
Q

What clinicopathological findings should raise a suspicion of ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP)?

A

Fox JVECC 2020
Patients with a new bacterial isolate identified by ET lavage culture at 48hrs. 46% in this study.
TXR (new pulmonary infiltrates at 48hrs) & leukocytosis (66%) alsosupportive.
Study recc obtaining bacterial cultures at initiation of MV & at 48hrs.

46
Q

What breed & location are overrepresented with lung lobe torsion in juvenile dogs?

A

Latimer JAVMA 2020
Left cranial lung lobe > right middle
Pugs (also Afghan hounds but not in this study)

47
Q

What arterial blood gas findings may be encountered in WHWTs with CIPF?

A

Low PaO2 & high A-a gradient (PAO2 - PaO2) - can occur with lack of CSx suggesting adaptation to chronic process.

48
Q

What is Krebs von den Lungen-6? What is its potential utility as a biomarker?

Name 1 other potential biomarker with similar utility?

A

Laurila VCNA 2020 review
KL-6 = mucin-like glycoprotein predominantly expressed by damaged alveolar type II epithelium, significantly increased expression with epithelial injury > secreted into circulation through damaged alveolar basement membrane).

Potential biomarker to diagnose interstitial lung disease in dogs (esp predisposition to CIPF in WHWTs)

Serum TGF-beta (key mediator of fibrosis) - higher in WHWTs with CIPF

49
Q

What disease often co-exists in dogs with chronic LP rhinitis? What implications does this have for treatment & response?

A

Gianella JVIM 2020
22/25 dogs had endoscopic GI lesions (most moderate-severe oesophageal & duodneal changes) - histo mostly consistent with chronic inflammation.

Remission or marked
improvement of respiratory signs was observed in the majority of dogs treated
only for GI signs up to 12 months after endoscopy.

50
Q
  1. What is a major structural difference between bronchioles & large airways?
  2. What bronchiolar disease is a major ddx for feline asthma, and when should this be considered?
  3. What airway changes are seen with mineral dust airway disease?
  4. What is a characteristic CT finding for bronchiolar disease in cats?
A

Reinero JVIM 2019
1. Bronchioles lack cartilage, <2mm diameter.
2. Constrictive/obliterative bronchiolitis. Consider when unusual XR features, failure to respond to bronchodilators and/or GCS. Ideally CT.
3. Mural fibrosis with chronic inflammation leading to luminal narrowing.
4. Tree-in-bud sign (multiple areas of centrilobular nodules with a linear branching pattern).

51
Q

What rare complication may be considered in dogs presenting with respiratory distress following recent endotracheal intubation?

A

Robin JVIM 2017
Obstructive fibrinous tracheal pseudomembrane (OFTP) - creates a 1-way valve obstruction. Needed to be endoscopically removed in this case report. Reported in people.

52
Q

What are the clinical features of congenital lar par in Alaskan Huskies? Did surgery improve outcome?
What other breeds are affected by congenital lar par?

A

Von Pfeil JAVMA 2018
Most affected dogs had blue eyes, white facial markings, and oral mucosal tags or tissue bands.
Mean age at onset of CSx 6.4mths. Profound dyspnea at birth, collapse after brief exercise, exercise intolerance.
Mononeuropathy of recurrent laryngeal nerves, without polyneuropathy. Histo - neurogenic atrophy of cricoarytenoideus dorsalis m.
32% dogs clinically improved after sx (unilateral CA lateralization) > could compete in sled dog races.

Bouviers des Flandres, Dalmatians, Rotties, whitecoated
GSDs, Bull Terriers, Alaskan Malamutes, Siberian Husky–Alaskan Malamute X, Leonbergers, Great Pyrenees.

53
Q

What additional procedure should be considered in dogs & cats undergoing balloon dilatation for imperforate nasopharyngeal stenosis, and why? What is the procedural complication rate & most common complications?

A

Burdick JAVMA 2018
Stent placement (covered stents had more success & were used in cases where uncovered stents failed).
Complications - tissue ingrowth, chronic infection, stent fracture (uncovered stents); chronic infection & oronasal fistula (covered stents).
High complication rate (68% with stent placement though higher w/o) but overall 78% had good outcome.

54
Q

What is the potential benefit of using a frameless CT-guided stereotacic biopsy system to obtain nasal biopsies in dogs?

A

Kuhlman JAVMA 2016
Allowed sampling of more representative specimens from the nasal passages of sinuses, and identification of malignant neoplasia in dogs with initial bx that were suggestive of benign dz.

55
Q

What was the utility of thoracic CT & bronchial wall thickness-to-pulmonary artery diameter (BWPA) ratio of the cranial lung lobes in diagnosis of chronic bronchitis in dogs?

A

Mortier JAVMA 2018
Thoracic CT has low Sn 46% (90% Sp). BWPA was poorly accurate to differentiate CB from control dogs. Overall both had limited diagnostic value.

56
Q

What % of dogs with permanent tracheostomies require revision sx, and what are the associated risk factors?
What factors predictive of survival in these dogs?

A

Grimes JAVMA 2019
35%. Stoma stenosis, skinfold occlusion, Brachycephalics.

OST 1825d, shorter survival in dogs receiving steroids before PT, tracheal collapse, older dogs