Survival after Small Intestine Resection and Anastomosis in Horses
- 1 November 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Veterinary Surgery
- Vol. 18 (6) , 415-423
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-950x.1990.tb01116.x
Abstract
The authors examined factors influencing survival in 140 horses that recovered from anesthesia after small intestinal resection between 1968 and 1986, using Kaplan-Meier estimated survival curves and the Cox proportional hazards regression model. Seventy-two horses (51%) died during the initial postoperative period, 19 horses (14%) died after discharge from the hospital, 33 horses (24%) were alive, and 16 horses (11%) were classified as censored. Mean age of surgery was 8 years. Horses 15 years of age or older, Arabians and Stallions, were overrepresented in the hospital population. The most common reason for resection was strangulation of bowel through a mesenteric rent. The mean and 50% median survival times were 1540 and 27 days, respectively. Horses admitted after January 1, 1980, had a significantly longer survival than those admitted before that time. Survival was longer after anastomosis of two small intestinal segments than after anastomosis of a small intestinal segment to the cecum; however, the length of bowel resected and the method of anastomosis had no demonstrable influence on survival. Of the variables studied, the heart rates of presentation and 24 hours after surgery were the most accurate predictors of survival.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bypass Surgery for the Treatment of Small Intestinal Ileus in the Horse A Report of Three CasesVeterinary Surgery, 1988
- Elective inversion of the distal ileal stump into the caecum of the horseEquine Veterinary Journal, 1987
- A Potential Technique Error in Stapled Side-to-Side Anastomosis of the Small Intestine of the HorseVeterinary Surgery, 1987
- Incidence, diagnosis and treatment of postoperative complications in colic casesEquine Veterinary Journal, 1986
- Resection and anastomosis of small intestine: Current methods applicable to the horseEquine Veterinary Journal, 1986
- Surgical Treatment of Colic Results in 181 HorsesVeterinary Surgery, 1983
- Survey of 79 referral colic casesEquine Veterinary Journal, 1983
- Gangrene of the BowelSurgical Clinics of North America, 1979
- Abdominal Crisis in the Horse: A Comparison of Pre‐Surgical Evaluation With Surgical Findings and ResultsVeterinary Surgery, 1978
- The Indications for Equine Laparotomy—An Analysis of 140 CasesEquine Veterinary Journal, 1975