Weight Loss in Horses Flashcards

1
Q

Why is weight loss in horses of importance?

A

•Common clinical presentation

–A challenging diagnostic approach potentially involving many body systems – weight loss is a very specific and general thing

–Multiple potential causes

–Often without a specific diagnosis – client may not have the money to spend and many other things!

•Highly emotive topic

–Weight loss can be related to neglect

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2
Q

What are the most common cause of weight loss in the horse?

Mark with * for the most common

A

–Dental disease *

–Renal disease

–Liver disease

–Intestinal disease in general *

–Malnutrition

–Neoplasia – more common in dogs and cats!

–GI Infection – moderately common

–Systemic infection

–Parasites * - a bit less common than they have been as owners getting better at monitoring

–For weight loss, usually thinking about something chronic

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3
Q

What can cause reduced intake as a mechanism of weight loss?

A

Inappropriate feeding, unable to obtain feed, competition for feed, dental disorders, dysphagia

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4
Q

What can cause reduced digetion, absorption or assimilation of nutrients as a mechanism of weight loss?

A

–dental disorders (horses doesn’t chew properly so first stop of digestive process is a problem), malabsorption syndromes (something specific to the intestine

–liver disease – will also have a role in digestive process

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5
Q

What can cause increased losses as a mechanism of weight loss?

A

–protein losing enteropathy or nephropathy

–sequestration to body cavity = peritonitis or pleuritis

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6
Q

What can cause increasedrequirements as a mechanism of weight loss?

A

pregnancy, lactation, sepsis, neoplasia, other systemic disease

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7
Q

What can cause anorexia (as part of reduced intake with weight loss)?

A

•Anorexia – decreased intake overall. Can be related to:

–Pain

•Intestinal pain

–Gastric ulcers – post prandial pain (only if severe)

–Adhesions - low grade recurrent colic

–Visceral pain – pleural / peritoneal disease

•Severe musculoskeletal pain

–E.g. Laminitis

–Dysphagia

  • Pharyngeal / laryngeal dysfunction (Guttural pouch)
  • Toxicity e.g. lead
  • Botulism
  • Chronic Grass sickness
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8
Q

What is Equine Grass Sickness?

What are the different levels and how long do they survive?

A
  • A generalised dysautonomia affecting primarily the enteric nervous system, but other body systems as well
  • Non GI effects aid in its diagnosis
  • Mainly parasympathetic NS
  • Acute : Die rapidly
  • Sub acute : Survive > 2 days
  • Chronic : Survive > 7 days
  • A Clinical diagnosis
  • decrease in GI motility from mouth of anus, with decrease in GI secretions
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9
Q

What do Equine Grass Sickness Horses often look like?

What does this look similar to?

A
  • Grass sickness horse slightly underweight
  • Very tucked up abdomen
  • Often very weak
  • Muscle fasciculations, esp around shoulder – indication of weakness
  • Nasal discharge but bottom left pic shows spontaneous reflex – stomach will be full
  • This presentation could also show similar to strangulation of SI
  • EGS – high HR, same with strangulating lipoma, but with EGS once you have done the NGT – it will decrease, lipoma cases don’t stay decreased and will go back again
  • EGS – belly tap normal, serosanguinous with lipoma
  • Very difficult to differentiate between EGS and strangulating lipoma
  • Usually will go to surgery to differentiate!
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10
Q

What are some diagnostic tests for equine grass sickness?

A

•Ileal biopsy (in vivo)

–Best diagnostic test

–Requires laporotomy (midline / flank)

  • Laporotomy decreases survival
  • Neuronal degeration within ganglia
  • Depletion of ganglia
  • Vacuolation

–Pathology localised to ileum in Chronic EGS

–Generalised intestinal pathology in acute disease

•Rectal biopsy - 71% sensitivity 100% specificity – the reality is that if you need to go to surgery and waiting for biopsy if you know you may need to go to surgery, not suitable to wait 3 days until results come back

–14 horses

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11
Q

Label the following arrows

A
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12
Q

What are some histological findings in a horse with equine grass sickness?

A

•Chromatolysis, vacuolation of cells within autonomic ganglia

–also affects other autonomic ganglia

•Not a straight forward diagnosis – might have 1 or 2 neurons that are affected

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13
Q

What is the Phenylephrine Test with regards to trying to diagnose equine grass sickness?

A
  • Topical application of 0.5% phenylephrine to one eye
  • examination 30 minutes later
  • Positive test = reversal of the ptosis in that eye, increase in angle between the corneal surface and the eyelash.
  • test useful in supporting of defective smooth muscle activity as an underlying cause of the ptosis
  • BUT False positives seenà normal horses can show some response to this test
  • Can also see false positive if been sedated with alpha 2 agonist
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14
Q

What would you see on oesophageal endoscopy with equine grass sickness?

What is the problem with using this test to diagnose?

A
  • Linear oesophageal ulcers
  • indicative of gastro-oesophageal reflux
  • In absence of severe ileus and extensive gastric distension
  • suggestive of lower oesophageal spincter dysfunction
  • Many EGS horses do not have oesophageal ulcers
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15
Q

What is the treatment for equine grass sickness?

What is the prognosis?

A
  • Nursing care is paramount for a successful outcome
  • Useful website vets and owners
  • Prognosis poor
  • Is subacute and survive first few days, may become chronic and may be able to save them. If they come as chronic straight away, difficult to tell what it is
  • Encourage to eat, a lot of TLC
  • Symptomatic therapy for each individual problem
  • Analgesia

–NSAIDs

–Promotes voluntary feeding - reduces pain associated with swallowing and abdominal pain

–Oesophageal / gastric ulceration - H2 blockers, sucralfate

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16
Q

What supportive care can you offer to horses with equine grass sickness?

A

•Feeding

–Small feeds every 30 - 60 minutes

–Hand feeding (don’t leave horse to eat)

–Hand grazing

–Varied diets

•Appetite stimulation – not necessarily very commonly used

–Diazepam 0.02mg/kg IV BID-TID

•Nursing

–Grooming

–Access to other horses

–Rhinitis - Steam, mucolytics – some horses gets very long crusts within their nasal passages, make resp noise when breathing

–Prokinetics - can try them but not likely to have a huge effect

–Cisapride has most data – no longer available

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17
Q

What is the long term prognosis for horses with equine grass sickness?

A
  • Using the selection criteria detailed in the above article approx 80 % chronic equine grass sickness survive.
  • Currently no accurate indicators in chronic cases at initial presentation that can be used to predict the duration of supportive or success of the outcome.
  • (Milne and others 1994) àsurvival predictors

–Degree of dysphagia (closely associated with appetite)

– the severity of rhinitis

  • Main problems encountered in the first 2 months post discharge from a hospital
  • mild colic
  • poor appetite,
  • Dysphagia
  • sweating and coat changes (areas of piloerection frequently affecting anatomical sites previouslyaffected by patchy sweating).
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18
Q

How can you CONFIRM your diagnosis of equine grass sickness?

A
  • Cranial cervical ganglion
  • Cranial mesenteric ganglia

–Ganglia is subrenal

  • Remove spleen
  • Raise kidney, remove suprarenal connective tissue - contains adrenal

–Obtain the cranial mesenteric ganglia

–Section extending from mid aorta, cranial pole of kidney to peritoneum

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19
Q

What is associated with liver disease?

A

•Maldigestion

–Rare in horses

  • Anorexia
  • Hypoalbuminaemia

–Rare in horses

  • Increase energy consumption
  • Infection / Sepsis
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20
Q

What are some labratory investigations for liver disease?

A

•Liver damage indicators

–Serum enzyme activities

–SDH/GLDH – hepatocellular

–GGT – biliary

•Liver function indicators

–Bilirubin

»May increase mildly with starvation / anorexia

–Bile acids

»Don’t do pre or post prandial as they don’t have a gall bladder

–Ammonia

21
Q

How common is renal disease in horses?

How can you assess/diagnos - what should you NOT use?

A

•Rare in horses

–Weight loss predominantly caused by anorexia

–Protein loosing enteropathies also occur

•Assess/diagnosis

–Serum creatinine

–NOT BUN!!

–Urine SG

22
Q

What are some things that can cause primary and secondary peritonitis?

A

•PRIMARY

–haematogenous

•e.g. Strep. Equi, Actinobacillus, R. Equi

–migrating parasites

•SECONDARY

– SEPTIC

  • rupture of GI tract
  • uterine tear

–REACTIVE

  • abscess
  • neoplasia
  • ruptured bladder
23
Q

What are some clinical signs of peritonitis?

A

–Varied from severe colic (intestinal catastrophe) to mild depression

  • Pyrexia
  • Depression
  • Ileus ± reflux
  • Pain on walking
  • Anorexia
  • Can be quite generalised and non specific clinical signs!!
24
Q

What is the diagnosis and prognosis of peritonitis?

A
  • Copious volumes of peritoneal fluid
  • High numbers of degenerate neutrophils
  • Peritonitis fluid will be very cloudy, cannot read newspaper through it!
  • Prognosis
  • Dependant on primary cause

–12/21 horses survived

  • Haematogenous or abdominal abscess
25
Q

What is malabsorption and protein losing enteropathies and what can they cause?

A

•Malabsorption and protein loosing enteropathies

–Complex range of conditions leading to reduced energy uptake

  • Parasitic disease – cyathostomiasis (most relevant usually and small strongyles), large strongyles – causes malabsorption
  • Idiopathic – smart way to say you don’t know!!
  • Infiltrative bowel disease

–Inflammation or neoplastic infiltrates

»Neoplastic – lymphoma, but not very common

–May also cause chronic diarrhoea

  • Either due to primary large colon dysfunction
  • Abnormal energy substrates to hind gut flora
  • Requires extensive pathology
26
Q

Give some examples of infiltrative bowel diseases

A

•GRANULOMATOUS ENTERITIS

•LYMPHOCYTIC-PLASMACYTIC
ENTERITIS

  • MEED (Multisystemic Eosinophilic Epitheliotrophic Disease) – not a GI disease only! Will present with GI but also has issues with places such as skin and lungs for example – increased in eosinophilic presence in most tissues, don’t really know why it happens
  • EOSINOPHILIC ENTERITIS

Generally – have presence of inflammatory cells in intestinal wall leading to malabsorption and protein loss

27
Q

How can you diagnose infiltrative bowel diseases?

Granulomatous enteritis

Lymphocytic Plasmaytic enteritis

Idiopathic eosinophilic enterocolitis

MEED

A

•Granulomatous Enteritis

–Young horses

–Very severe weight loss

•Lymphocytic Plasmacytic Enteritis

–Rectal biopsy is abnormal in 42% of cases

•Idiopathic Eosinophilic Entercolitis

–Segmentally thickened small intestine

–Circumferential mural fibrosis

–Often present with colic (surgical)

•MEED

–also often involves skin, particularly around coronary bands exudative dermatitis / ulcerative coronitis

–Intestinal histopathology shows eosinophilic granuloma formation and wide spread fibrosis

28
Q

What are some other causes of infiltrative bowel disease?

A

–parasites

–genetic and/or familial

–food allergy

–mycobacterium spp.

–Histoplasma

–other

29
Q

What treatment do we have for infiltrative bowel disease?

A

–Anti-inflammatory doses of steroids – it is an inflammatory conditions!

  • Dexamethasone
  • Predisolone

–Anthelmintics – if parasites are having an issue

–Diet – want to increase energy rich

  • Highly digestible foods
  • High fibre diet

–LI VFA production

30
Q

Give some different types of equine lymphoma and which age groups they affect

A
  • ALIMENTARY - juveniles and aged horses
  • GENERALISED - particularly aged horses, often involves gastrointestinal tract
  • SOLITARY - Any age group
  • CRANIAL MEDIASTINAL - Any age group
  • CUTANEOUS - Any age group
31
Q

What paraneoplastic syndromes do you get with equine lymphoma?

A

–hypercalcaemia

–Haemolytic anaemia

32
Q

What is wrong here?

A

Equine Lymphoma

33
Q

If you have malabsorption, what can you test the response to to narrow it down?

A
  • Anthelmintic responsive – probably some parasite related!
  • Steroid responsive

–some cases of eosinophilic enteritis, granulomatous enteritis, lymphocytic-plasmacytic enteritis

–Will treat anything inflammatory

•Non-steroid responsive

–some cases of eosinophilic enteritis, granulomatous enteritis, lymphocytic-plasmacytic enteritis

–alimentary lymphosarcoma

34
Q

What does right dorsal colitis present with?

What is the diagnosis?

A

•Usually presents with diarrhoea

–Protein loosing enteropathy

–Mostly associated with NSAID administration – doesn’t have to be that its had more than recommended limit!

  • Phenylbutazone most commonly implicated
  • ? Is this fair?

–Ultrasound shows thickened RDC – measure thickness and if above 5mm + history – can be suspicious of this

35
Q

What is the diagnosis for right dorsal colitis?

A

–Tx Misoprostol (PG analogue – will help with increasing blood flow)

  • Increases intestinal blood flow
  • Discontinue NSAIDs
36
Q

What is the clinical approach to weight loss? What should you do first?

A

•History

–Rule out obvious causes (diet), parasites

•Clinical examination

–BCS – genuine weight loss

–Jaundice – liver?

–Oedema – protein losing enteropathy?

–Fever – inflammatory condition?

–Oral / dental examination

–Rectal examination

37
Q

What labratory testing can you use for weight loss to try and reach a diagnosis?

A

•Targeted

–Liver, renal, inflammation (acute phase proteins)

•If the first set of bloods don’t give you a diagnosis, repeating the same tests more than once more rarely will

–reference ranges are calculated to include 95% of the normal population -i.e. in any give horse, 1 in 20 results will be “abnormal”

  • Abdominocentesis
  • Faecal worm egg count ? Tapeworm
38
Q

With a horse with weight loss, what can you look for on haematology and biochemistry?

A

•Increased WBC

–Peritonitis/ cyathstomosis

•Neutrophilia

–peritonitis

•Eosinophilia

–Sometimes seen in parasite infestation

•Anaemia

–Often ‘anaemia of chronic disease’

•Liver enzymes

–See liver dz lecture

39
Q

How can you interpret serum proteins?

A

•Total Protein

–decreases may be masked by concurrent dehydration

–Interpret this is relative to haematology as well, albumin

•Hypoalbuminaemia

–GI loss far more common than renal

–effusions - peritoneal/pleural

–liver disease - rarely a cause

•Hypoglobulinaemia

–GI loss

•Hyperglobulinaemia

–chronic inflammatory disease (including cyathostomosis)

•Hyperfibrinogenaemia – fibrinogens, acute phase protein. High in relation to inflammation

–infection

–inflammation

–neoplasia

40
Q

Where do you get most loss of albumin with hypoalbuminaemia?

A

–GI loss far more common than renal

–effusions - peritoneal/pleural

–liver disease - rarely a cause

41
Q

What is serum protein electrophoresis?

A

•Serum Protein Electrophoresis – also can be helpful, likely to need to send off for this

–Sensitivity 45% Specificity 63%

alpha - infection, inflammation, neoplasia (acute phase proteins)

beta - parasitism, chronic infection, neoplasia (C reactive protein)

y (gamma?)- polyclonal - chronic infection, abscesses, neoplasia

=monoclonal - tumours of the reticuloendothelial system

42
Q

How do you perform an oral glucose tolerance test and what do the results mean?

A

–starve overnight

–1 gm/kg in a 10-20% solution administered by nasogastric tube

–keep horse calm

–Expect to have an increase of over 85% from baseline

–If between 25-95% - partial malabsorption

–Anything below 25 – complete absorption

–Means horse cannot absorb SUGARS, not necessarily fat or protein

43
Q

What are some problems with the OGAT? (oral glucose test it think)

A

•Does not only assess SI function

–Glucose absorption is also absorbed in LI

–D-xylose absorption test more reliable

  • Expensive
  • Partial Malabsorption (25-80%)

–Parasitism, localised lesions, rapid GI transit.

•Delayed flat curve

–Delayed gastric emptying

–Poor starvation

•Xylose absorption tests better

44
Q

What can you use intestinal ultrasonography to look for?

A
  • wall thickness
  • lumen diameter
  • motility
  • Anatomy
  • Left – SI should be 2-3mm in thickness?
  • Right – thickened SI
45
Q

When and how should you do a GI biopsy?

A

•In the presence of abnormal OGAT

–Midline Exploratory celiotomy

–Flank laporotomy

–Laparoscopy

•Rectal mucosal biopsy

–Using uterine biopsy instrument

–Biopsy from 11 and 1 o’clock postion

  • Relies on extensive pathology
  • Rectal eosinophils very common

–Eosinophilic proctitis

This is usually where horse owners often give up!

46
Q

How should you perform a rectal biopsy?

A
  • Easy to perform - relatively low reward
  • Mare uterine biopsy instrument
  • 20 - 30 cm inside rectum
  • Grab small piece of mucosa from floor at around 4 or 8 o’clock
  • Submit for histology (in formal saline) and culture
  • Tetanus prophylaxis
  • NSAID-Flunixin meglumine
47
Q

When are you likely to use a laparotomy?

A
  • intestinal biopsy
  • frequently will not change therapy
  • usually only undertaken if there is a reasonable possibility of a lesion amenable to resection
  • Need right equipment so will need referral centre!
48
Q

What is the summary and key points of weight loss in horses?

Soz, nice to have the little points that gayle puts in

  1. Common causes
  2. Less common causes
  3. Initial Diagnostic Approach
  4. Further Diagnostic Approach
A
  • Common causes of weight loss include inadequate nutrition, dental problems, parasitic and liver disease
  • Less common causes of weight loss include peritonitis, IBD, grass sickness and neoplasia
  • Initial diagnostic approach: PE, haematology, peritoneal fluid analysis, OGTT, US exam, assessment to response to non-specific therapy
  • Further diagnostic options: laparoscopy and laparotomy (scintigraphy)