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Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine (eBook)

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2024 | 1. Auflage
256 Seiten
Wiley (Verlag)
978-1-394-23338-0 (ISBN)

Lese- und Medienproben

Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine -  Lynelle R. Johnson
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A fully updated edition of the essential comprehensive resource on diagnosing and treating respiratory diseases in dogs and cats

Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine, Third Edition is a thorough, comprehensive reference for respiratory medicine in dogs and cats. Focusing on the entire respiratory tract, the book presents detailed coverage of diagnostics and therapeutics. Now fully updated to incorporate the latest clinical data and case studies, this Third Edition continues to be an indispensable resource for all small animal veterinary practitioners involved with respiratory disease.

Covering a wide range of respiratory diseases, the book draws on extensive research and clinical practice. Readers of the third edition of Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine will also find:

  • Clinical photographs and illustrations accompanying every major concept discussed
  • New clinical case examples for diseases in specific locations of the respiratory tract and new sections in almost every chapter
  • Discussion of the full range of disease processes

Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine is ideal for any veterinary practitioner or specialist with an interest in respiratory disease, including internal medicine specialists and residents.

Lynelle R. Johnson, DVM, MS, PhD, DACVIM, is a Professor in the Department of Medicine and Epidemiology at the University of California at Davis School of Veterinary Medicine in Davis, California, USA.


A fully updated edition of the essential comprehensive resource on diagnosing and treating respiratory diseases in dogs and cats Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine, Third Edition is a thorough, comprehensive reference for respiratory medicine in dogs and cats. Focusing on the entire respiratory tract, the book presents detailed coverage of diagnostics and therapeutics. Now fully updated to incorporate the latest clinical data and case studies, this Third Edition continues to be an indispensable resource for all small animal veterinary practitioners involved with respiratory disease. Covering a wide range of respiratory diseases, the book draws on extensive research and clinical practice. Readers of the third edition of Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine will also find: Clinical photographs and illustrations accompanying every major concept discussedNew clinical case examples for diseases in specific locations of the respiratory tract and new sections in almost every chapterDiscussion of the full range of disease processes Canine and Feline Respiratory Medicine is ideal for any veterinary practitioner or specialist with an interest in respiratory disease, including internal medicine specialists and residents.

1
Localization of Disease


Nasal Discharge


History


Nasal discharge is almost always a sign of local disease within the nasal cavity, however there are some instances when nasal discharge can occur with lower respiratory, gastrointestinal, or systemic disease. One exception to a purely nasal localization of nasal discharge is eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy, an inflammatory condition of the epithelial lining of the airways and lungs that can also involve the nasal epithelium. Affected animals can have nasal signs that last longer or are more noticeable to owners than are lower respiratory signs. Interestingly, cats with eosinophilic lower airway disease do not display this clinical finding. Nasal discharge can also accompany infectious lower respiratory tract disease in the dog that coughs airway material into the nasopharynx, which subsequently drains from the nose. This happens less commonly in the cat. Thirdly, some animals with vomiting or regurgitation will display nasal discharge because of nasopharyngeal regurgitation of gastrointestinal contents. This might be more common in brachycephalic breeds, which frequently develop pharyngeal collapse associated with increased inspiratory respiratory effort (Pollard et al. 2018). Brachycephalic animals also are prone to oral mishandling of food due to excessive pharyngeal folds and because of multiple gastrointestinal diseases, including hiatal hernia, gastroesophageal reflux, and mild inflammatory intestinal disease that leads to vomiting or regurgitation. All of these features contribute to nasal discharge in brachycephalic animals, with brachycephalic dogs affected more often than cats. Finally, nasal discharge, particularly sanguinous nasal discharge, can be encountered in systemic diseases associated with coagulopathies (thrombocytopenia, thrombocytopathy, coagulation factor defects), hypertension, or hyperviscosity syndrome, such as encountered with leishmaniasis and chronic ehrlichiosis.

The most common respiratory causes of nasal discharge include infectious, inflammatory, and neoplastic disorders as well as dental‐related nasal disease and foreign bodies (Table 1.1). Additional clinical signs that can be seen in animals with nasal disease include sneezing or reverse sneezing, pawing or rubbing at the face, noisy breathing or mouth breathing, facial pain, or an unexplained odor near the head.

When evaluating the animal with nasal discharge, important considerations include the duration of signs, the type of discharge as well as changes in its character over time, and the presence of unilateral, bilateral, or progressive signs. Acute onset of nasal discharge is often accompanied by sneezing, is frequently paroxysmal in nature, and is most commonly associated with infectious upper respiratory tract disease or a foreign body. Affected animals can have signs that resolve within a week without treatment, however some dogs or cats are so severely affected that they are rapidly taken to the veterinarian to determine a plan for intervention. Occasionally, dogs with nasal foreign bodies will have resolution of signs despite continued presence of organic matter within the nose. This represents a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma, particularly in the dog that has an appropriate signalment and exposure history for a nasal foreign body. Failure to investigate signs and potentially retrieve a foreign body can have long‐term consequences due to migration of the foreign body into the central nervous system or development of a secondary fungal infection. The most frustrating cases are those with chronic, slowly progressive nasal discharge and sneezing over weeks to months to years before the severity of disease prompts veterinary care. Prioritizing various empiric therapies requires an assessment of the top differential diagnoses likely in each case and determining what treatment is least likely to worsen signs, to interfere with further diagnostic testing, or to hamper the owner from pursuing specific work‐up.

Table 1.1 Causes of nasal discharge in dogs and cats.

Dog Cat
Infectious Canine infectious respiratory disease complexa Acute upper respiratory tract disease complexb
Aspergillus Cryptococcus
Cryptocococcus Aspergillus
Penicillium
Rhinosporidium
Leishmania
Ehrlichia
Inflammatory Lymphoplasmacytic rhinitis Feline chronic rhinosinusitis
Neoplastic Adenocarcinoma Lymphoma
Sarcoma Adenocarcinoma
Lymphoma Sarcoma
Local Tooth root abscess Nasal or nasopharyngeal polyp
Oronasal fistula Tooth root abscess
Trauma Oronasal fistula
Foreign body Foreign body
Nasal or nasopharyngeal polyp Trauma
Other Primary ciliary dyskinesia Primary ciliary dyskinesia
Nasal mites
Xeromycteria (dry nose syndrome)

a Reported causes include canine adenovirus‐2, canine parainfluenza‐3 virus, canine respiratory coronavirus, canine herpesvirus, canine distemper virus, canine influenza viruses (H3N8, H3N2, H1N1), pneumovirus, Bordetella, Mycoplasma cynos, Mycoplasma canis, and Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus. Novel viral organisms are continually being identified.

b Reported causes include feline herpesvirus‐1, feline calicivirus, Chlamydia, Bordetella, and Mycoplasma.

With many causes of nasal signs, including viral disease or foreign body, discharge is serous initially and then progresses to a mucoid character when inflammation induces mucus production or when secondary bacterial infection develops. Yellow‐green nasal discharge can be an indicator of eosinophilic disease, but is also encountered in other infectious or inflammatory conditions, while brown‐tinged discharge suggests the presence of blood within the mucus. Bright red blood can be found in combination with nasal discharge because of trauma to blood vessels associated with the primary disease process or due to the severity of sneezing. Epistaxis with or without nasal discharge has been associated with local causes of disease, including inflammatory rhinitis, canine aspergillosis, and neoplasia; however, in animals with pure epistaxis, systemic disorders must be considered, including coagulopathies, hyperviscosity syndrome, and systemic hypertension.

Nasal discharge that is strictly unilateral is most suspicious for local disease caused by a foreign body, trauma, tooth root abscess or oronasal fistula, or for an early fungal infection or neoplasm. However, arterial hypertension or a coagulopathy can also result in unilateral nasal bleeding despite being a systemic disease. Interestingly, inflammatory diseases such as lymphoplasmacytic rhinitis in the dog and feline chronic rhinosinusitis can present with lateralizing clinical signs, although in most of these cases, imaging and histology reveal that both sides of the nasal cavity are affected.

Non‐respiratory history that should be collected includes environmental exposure to foreign bodies, previous trauma, and evidence of vomiting or regurgitation. For animals with epistaxis, potential exposure to rodenticides or vector‐borne diseases that can result in thrombocytopenia, thrombocytopathy, or vasculitis (such as Ehrlichia or Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever) should be identified. In addition, history should be scrutinized for signs consistent with systemic diseases such as hyperthyroidism, renal disease, or adrenal disease, which can result in arterial hypertension.

Signalment


Young animals with nasal discharge are most often affected by infectious upper respiratory tract diseases. A nasopharyngeal polyp should be considered when discharge is accompanied by obstructed breathing, stertorous respirations, gagging, or retching. Primary ciliary dyskinesia is a defect of innate immunity inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion that causes ineffectual mucociliary clearance, trapping of secretions, and recurrent infection. Therefore, this condition is frequently recognized in a younger animal. Affected dogs are often purebred, with an increased prevalence in the Bichon Frise, Old English Sheepdog (Merveille et al. 2014), and Newfoundland (Watson et al. 1999); genetic mutations have also been reported in the Alaskan Malamute (Anderegg et al. 2019), and Rough Collie (Hug et al. 2019) although any breed of dog or cat can be affected. While neoplastic disease most typically affects...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 4.11.2024
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Veterinärmedizin
Schlagworte disease of airways • heartworm disease • Mediastinal disease • nasal disorder • Parenchymal disease • pathophysiology • Pleural Disease • Pulmonary hypertension • pulmonary thromboembolism • respiratory diagnostics • respiratory therapeutics • vascular disorder
ISBN-10 1-394-23338-8 / 1394233388
ISBN-13 978-1-394-23338-0 / 9781394233380
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