Melena Flashcards
what is melena?
Melena (dark, tarry faeces) is caused by (presence of) blood in the lumen of the stomach or proximal intestinal tract, resulting in black (digested) blood appearing in the faeces
what are the Gastrointestinal differentials for melena?
- PROXIMAL:
◦ Oral/pharyngeal/oesophageal bleeding; trauma/infection/neoplasia
◦ Ingestion of blood; i.e. after parturition or coughed up (see later on) - MIDDLE:
◦ Rumen/reticular ulcers
◦ Abomasal ulceration; adult cattle & calves
‣ Multiple potential causes ……. not well understood
‣ BVDV
‣ BLV; lymphosarcoma
‣ MCF
◦ Duodenal ulcers
◦ Abomasal torsion/displacement
◦ Haemorrhagic bowel syndrome
◦ Intussusception
◦ Gastro-enteritis + bleeding
‣ Enteritis; Winter dysentery (?coronavirus), coccidiosis
what are the respiratory, toxicity and other differentials for melena?
Respiratory
* Vena caval thrombosis +/- hepatic abscess; coughed up blood
Toxicity
* NSAID use
* Warfarin poisoning
* (Sulphur toxicity)
* Arsenic toxicity
* Oak toxicity
* (Snake bite)….
Other
* Coagulopathy (i.e. factor VIII deficiency, DIC)
* Bacillary haemoglobinuria (Clostridia haemolyticum)
when are abomasal ulcers more commonly seen?
what are the risk factors?
- Abomasal ulcers are more commonly seen in intensively managed herds, fed high energy, acidic diets (think concentrates)
- Maize silage as a major part of the diet seems to be a risk factor
- High yielding dairy cows are seemingly predisposed; particularly in the first 4-6 weeks of lactation and in the dry period
- Long term NSAIDs are also a risk factor
How are abomasal ulcers classified?
abomasal ulcers are diagnosed on clinical signs? what are the signs of each type?
- Type 1 (no haemorrhage)- no signs/ waxing and waning
- Type 2 (varying haemorrhage)
◦ SLIGHT BLEEDING: small/tarry faeces
◦ MODERATE BLEEDING: abdominal pain/intermittent anorexia/ ++ tarry faeces/occult blood in faeces
◦ MAJOR BLEEDING: obvious melena/complete anorexia/pale-chalk mucous membranes/weak pulse/ HR 100-140 bpm/cool extremities+
◦ LDA/RDA presence? - Type 3 (acute local peritonitis)- MILD-MODERATELY SICK- intermittent anorexia/pyrexia/rumen stasis/local abdominal pain
- Type 4 (acute diffuse peritonitis)- MUCH SICKER -complex anorexia/ ++pyrexia (>40 degC)/complete GI stasis/cold periphery/dehydrated/expiratory grunt/depressed/HR 100-140 bpm
- Type 5 (peritonitis in omental bursa)- similar to Type 3- often MILDER
what is the treatment and management for the differnt types of abomasal ulcers
- Type 1: ?
- Type 2: depends on degree of haemorrhage
◦ SLIGHT BLEEDING: high quality hay (no silage/concentrate feed for 5-14d), oral antacid?
◦ MOD-MAJOR BLEEDING: diet as above + ….
‣ If white mucous membranes/ HR >100 bpm/ RR+/ PCV <14% if not peracute or chronic bleed : whole blood transfusion (4-6L)
‣ If bleeding as LDA/RDA: PCV >14% –> surgery to correct DA, PCV <14% –> transfuse then DA surgery - Type 3: dietary change + broad-spectrum antibiotics (amoxycillin) for 7-14 days/until normal temperature for 48h.
◦ (Ranitidine IV – NOT FOR USE IN FOOD PRODUCING ANIMALS (FPA))
◦ Omeprazole orally? Valuable animals ONLY + ?evidence - Type 4: often unsuccessful, massive septic peritonitis
◦ IV broad spectrum antibiotics
◦ IV fluid therapy- address acid-base/electrolyte status
◦ Peritoneal lavage?
◦ Surgery to oversew/resect ulcer? VERY DIFFICULT TO ACHIEVE, +++ ADHESIONS
what is the prognosis of abomasal ulcers?
- Type 1: ?
- Type 2: good prognosis if before severe anaemia
◦ Recovery in 7-14 days, even if need blood transfusion
◦ If bleed + perforate –> very poor prognosis (often chronic/involve DA) - Type 3/5: good prognosis with dietary and medical management
◦ Recovery in 7-14 days, little recurrence documented? - Type 4: grave prognosis –> death 24-48h despite therapy
BEWARE - repeated melena after treatment for suspected Type 2 ulcer = ?abomasal neoplasia (lymphosarcoma most common)
what are the risk factors for abomasal ulcers in calves?
UNCLEAR!!
**Large volume milk feeding **(in only twice daily feeding)
Trichobezoars? (hair balls)
Bedding/shavings?
Prolonged NSAID use
what is different in the clinical signs of abomasal ulcers in calves?
- Perforating ulcers more common in calves
- Calves with perforating ulcers:
◦ Develop diffuse peritonitis
◦ Abdominal distension + found down
◦ Death within 12-36 hrs
◦ Or found dead …..- U/S very useful in calves to dx diffuse peritonitis
what is the treatment of abomasal ulcers in calves?
same as for adults, plus:
Diet: small amounts of milk frequently (mixed with antacid or alternated with alkalinising electrolyte solution)
Oral omeprazole to increase abomasal pH (? evidence)