trachealkollaps
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| trachealkollaps [2018/04/20 08:01] – [Therapie] m2 | trachealkollaps [2020/10/29 14:54] (aktuell) – Externe Bearbeitung 127.0.0.1 | ||
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| ====== Trachealkollaps ====== | ====== Trachealkollaps ====== | ||
| - | Wer: eher Chondrodystrophe à abnorme Chondrozytenfunktion, | + | ===== Epidemiologie ===== |
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| + | * eher Chondrodystrophe à abnorme Chondrozytenfunktion, | ||
| + | * Yorkshire Terrier | ||
| + | * Chihuahua | ||
| + | * Mops | ||
| + | * Toypudel | ||
| ===== Ursache ===== | ===== Ursache ===== | ||
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| * Grad 4: Dorsalmembran berührt ventrale Schleimhaut | * Grad 4: Dorsalmembran berührt ventrale Schleimhaut | ||
| - | {{:trachealkollaps_grading_tobias_johnston_2012_.jpg?300x267|trachealkollaps_grading_tobias_johnston_2012_.jpg}} | + | {{:rt_-_trachealkollaps_grade_tobias_2012_.jpg?950}} |
| ===== Symtome ===== | ===== Symtome ===== | ||
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| * Gewichtsreduktion | * Gewichtsreduktion | ||
| * Brustgeschirr | * Brustgeschirr | ||
| - | * Kortikosteroide | + | |
| - | * Bronchodilatatoren (Theophyllin, | + | |
| - | * AB, Antitussiva (Butorphanol 1 mg bid, Hydrocodon 0,2 mg/kg bid), Sedativa | + | * Bronchodilatatoren (Theophyllin, |
| - | * OP: externe Ringprothesen | + | * AB |
| + | * Antitussiva (Butorphanol 1 mg bid, Hydrocodon 0,2 mg/kg bid) | ||
| + | * Sedativa: Azepromazin, | ||
| + | * OP | ||
| + | * externe Ringprothesen | ||
| + | * Polypropylenringe | ||
| + | * wichtig segmentale Blutversorgung und N. laryngeus recurrens erhalten | ||
| + | * Abstand zw. Ringen 5-8 mm | ||
| + | * Unterstützende Therapie: Sauerstoff, GKK | ||
| + | * intraluminale Stents (in Sattledt nicht gern gemacht) | ||
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| + | Management of Tracheal Collapse | ||
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| + | World Small Animal Veterinary Association World Congress Proceedings, | ||
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| + | John Williams, MA, VetMB, LLB, CertVR, DECVS, FRCVS | ||
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| + | Professor, Northwest Surgeons, Cheshire, UK | ||
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| + | Tracheal collapse is a severely debilitating disease which can lead to absolute airway obstruction and death if not controlled. Over the years, a number of management techniques have been described, ranging from medication alone, to surgery on the trachea, the use of extraluminal supports and, lately, intraluminal stenting. The diversity of described techniques suggests that we have not yet managed to develop an ideal strategy for treating this difficult condition. | ||
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| + | Tracheal collapse is a progressive chronic condition of the trachea that appears to be irreversible. The clinical signs associated with tracheal collapse are | ||
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| + | The precise aetiology of tracheal collapse has long been a subject of controversy. The frequent incidence of signs in dogs aged six months or less lends support to the suggestion that the underlying cartilaginous abnormality has a congenital origin. Conversely, the progressive onset of signs later in life in other dogs appears to indicate an acquired aetiology. A third alternative, | ||
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| + | Treatment of tracheal collapse is focused on palliation of clinical signs, initially using medical therapy; but this may not in all cases resolve clinical signs in the long term. If conservative therapy fails, reported treatment options include use of tracheal ligament plication, extraluminal prosthetic rings or endoluminal tracheal stents. | ||
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| + | Classification of Collapsing Trachea | ||
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| + | Diagnosis | ||
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| + | The current gold standard for establishing a diagnosis is tracheoscopy, | ||
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| + | Medical Management | ||
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| + | A rational approach would lie in the elimination of factors which initiate the symptomatic state and in the suppression of the self-perpetuating cycle of cough, mucosal pathology and failure of the mucociliary escalator. Antiinflammatory agents have been widely recommended as a means of interrupting the cycle of tracheal inflammation and cough. The identification of dogs with an apparently allergic component to their clinical signs suggests that their immunosuppressive activity may be an additional factor in the reported efficacy of steroids for this condition. It seems unlikely, however, that the more advanced proliferative changes in the tracheal mucosa can be reversed by steroidal therapy and the potential side effects (e.g., obesity, hyperpnoea, weakening the cartilage) may mitigate against their prolonged use. The long-term use of steroids in the management of tracheal collapse is unwise with the exception of those cases in which an allergic aetiology has been established. | ||
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| + | Medical therapy is recommended for all animals with mild clinical signs and for those with less than 50% collapse, because it results in improvement in clinical signs in most dogs. Weight loss is critical to the success of other medical therapies. Environmental modifications, | ||
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| + | Medical therapy for dogs with tracheal collapse includes antitussives, | ||
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| + | Extraluminal Prostheses | ||
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| + | This is procedure that had fallen out of favour in recent years with the advent of intraluminal stenting procedures. Recent work suggest that this is still a viable option for severe cases of tracheal collapse. The concern has always centred on the fact that it is only possible to successfully place prostheses on the cervical trachea, with the concern being that the intrathoracic trachea would continue to collapse. | ||
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| + | The trachea reinforced by suturing the trachea to four to six polypropylene rings around it. The rings (approximately 5 mm wide) are made from polypropylene syringe holder with four to six holes drilled for suture placement. A ventral midline skin incision is made from the larynx to the thoracic inlet. The subcutaneous tissue and sternohyoideus muscles are separated to expose the trachea. The thyroid arteries and recurrent laryngeal nerves are bluntly dissected from the trachea only in the area of ring placement, and a polypropylene ring is placed between the tracheal wall and the recurrent laryngeal nerves; this is sutured to the tracheal cartilages and the trachealis muscle with 3-0 polypropylene. | ||
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| + | Recent work indicates that survival time postsurgery is excellent and that the presence of intrathoracic tracheal collapse does not prevent this procedure being carried out. Some dogs may require continued medical support. | ||
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| + | Intraluminal Stents | ||
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| + | Clinical improvement rates in 75%–90% of animals treated with self-expanding, | ||
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| + | Postoperative coughing is never totally reduced, as the stent interferes with the mucociliary clearance. The stent is prone to kinking, and the tracheal wall is prone to granuloma formation at the rostral and caudal extents of the stent. Additionally, | ||
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| + | Owners must be advised that tracheal stents should be deployed as late in the animals' | ||
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| + | The Future | ||
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| + | We do not have an ideal solution for this condition as yet. If medical management fails to control, then consider surgery or stent placement. Does the future lie in using three-dimensionally printed tracheal supports or grafts? | ||
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| + | Speaker Information \\ (click the speaker' | ||
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| + | [[https:// | ||
| + | Northwest Surgeons \\ | ||
| + | Cheshire, UK | ||
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| + | ===== Prognose ===== | ||
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| + | * extraluminale Ringendoprothesen: | ||
| + | * Mortalität 5%, Larynxparalyse 10% | ||
| + | * Tracheale Nekrose | ||
| + | * häufiger Husten nach Op | ||
| + | * schlechteres Outcome bei älteren Patienten | ||
| ===== Quellen ===== | ===== Quellen ===== | ||
| * Tobias KM & Johnston SA (2012): Veterinary surgery small animal. Elsevier, St. Louis, 1. ed. | * Tobias KM & Johnston SA (2012): Veterinary surgery small animal. Elsevier, St. Louis, 1. ed. | ||
| + | * Payne JD, Mehler SJ, Weisse C (2006): Tracheal collapse. Compendium Vet: 373-381. | ||
trachealkollaps.1524204105.txt.gz · Zuletzt geändert: 2020/10/29 14:54 (Externe Bearbeitung)
