Theses and Dissertations

ORCID

0000-0003-0852-5998

Issuing Body

Mississippi State University

Advisor

Lee, Alison M.

Committee Member

Seitz, Marc A.

Committee Member

Sullivant, Alyssa

Date of Degree

5-13-2022

Document Type

Graduate Thesis - Open Access

Major

Veterinary Medical Science

Degree Name

Master of Science (M.S.)

College

College of Veterinary Medicine

Department

Department of Clinical Sciences

Abstract

Biliary diseases are uncommon, potentially fatal causes of acute abdomen in dogs. Little information is present comparing the performance of computed tomography (CT) to ultrasound in identifying canine biliary pathology. Thirty-five client-owned dogs presenting for acute abdomen signs received an abdominal ultrasound and contrast-enhanced abdominal CT. Two authors reviewed the randomized, anonymized CT and ultrasound studies. Twenty-eight dogs had biliary pathology and seven dogs serving as controls had no evidence of biliary disease. The final diagnoses of patients with biliary pathology included cholelithiasis, gallbladder mucoceles, cholangiohepatitis/cholangitis, extrahepatic biliary obstruction, gallbladder wall edema, gallbladder wall mass, and cystic mucosal hyperplasia. Computed tomography was more accurate in identifying cholelithiasis than ultrasound. No statistical difference in the odds to identify other biliary pathology was identified between ultrasound and CT. Findings from this study suggest CT may be used in place of ultrasound in canine patients presenting for acute abdominal signs of biliary origin.

Sponsorship

ACVR Diplomate Grant Award

Share

COinS