• Title/Summary/Keyword: anal sacculectomy

Search Result 2, Processing Time 0.018 seconds

Use of a Foley Catheter for Anal Sacculectomy in Dogs (개에서 항문낭 절제를 위한 폴리카테터의 이용)

  • Han, Tae-Sung;Kim, Joong-Hyun;Cho, Ki-Rae;Lee, Hye-Yun;Kim, Gon-Hyung;Choi, Seok-Hwa
    • Journal of Veterinary Clinics
    • /
    • v.24 no.1
    • /
    • pp.35-37
    • /
    • 2007
  • Eight dogs were presented with anal sacculitis with purulent exudates and/or open in the right or left anal sac. Patient dogs, ranging in size from 3-to-8 kg, were treated with closed anal sacculectomies, in which the balloon of a Foley catheter (No. 6, 1.5 ml) was used to facilitate surgical dissection of the sac. In all cases, the Foley catheter successfully distended the anal sac during its removal. Clinical signs associated with the diseased anal sac were abated In the all dogs for a follow-up period of one-to-three months. Anal sacculectomy is a good therapeutic option for cases of chronic anal sacculectomy or impaction. The use of a small Foley catheter to distend the anal sacs during surgery was easy, Inexpensive, and successful.

Semitendinosus Muscle Transfer Flap for the Treatment of Canine Fecal Incontinence

  • Cho, Hyoung-sun;Lee, Dong-bin;Kwon, Yong-hwan;Kim, Young-ung;Kang, Jin-su;Lee, Ki-chang;Kim, Nam-soo;Kim, Min-su
    • Journal of Veterinary Clinics
    • /
    • v.33 no.2
    • /
    • pp.131-134
    • /
    • 2016
  • A 4-year-old intact female Maltese was referred to the Animal Medical Center of Chonbuk National University with a history of consistent fecal incontinence over 4 months following sacculectomy surgery. We suspected that anal sacculectomy resulted in loss of the external anal sphincter. On physical examination, the external anal sphincter muscle on the left side was intact, while the external anal sphincter muscle on the right side could not be detected and exhibited severe laceration. To repair the defect, the left semitendinosus muscle was transposed around the anus. The left semitendinosus muscle was isolated and transected near the stifle, reflected dorsally and passed around the ventral rectum into the pararectal fossa. Care was taken to preserve the integrity of the vasculature and nerve supply. The muscle was secured dorsally with simple interrupted sutures to the levator ani and coccygeus muscles to simulate the external anal sphincter. Nine days after surgery, the dog was defecating normally with no evidence of incontinence. The use of semitendinosus muscle flaps is a good option for the treatment of fecal incontinence secondary to loss of sphincter muscle in dogs.