Melena Flashcards

1
Q

what is melena?

A

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

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2
Q

what are the Gastrointestinal differentials for melena?

A
  • 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
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3
Q

what are the respiratory, toxicity and other differentials for melena?

A

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)

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4
Q

when are abomasal ulcers more commonly seen?
what are the risk factors?

A
  • 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
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5
Q

How are abomasal ulcers classified?

A
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6
Q

abomasal ulcers are diagnosed on clinical signs? what are the signs of each type?

A
  • 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
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7
Q

what is the treatment and management for the differnt types of abomasal ulcers

A
  • 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
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8
Q

what is the prognosis of abomasal ulcers?

A
  • 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)

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9
Q

what are the risk factors for abomasal ulcers in calves?

A

UNCLEAR!!
**Large volume milk feeding **(in only twice daily feeding)
Trichobezoars? (hair balls)
Bedding/shavings?
Prolonged NSAID use

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10
Q

what is different in the clinical signs of abomasal ulcers in calves?

A
  • 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
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11
Q

what is the treatment of abomasal ulcers in calves?

A

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)

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