| Literature DB >> 35681837 |
Sara J Erwin1, Marley E Clark1, Julie E Dechant2, Maia R Aitken3, Diana M Hassel4, Anthony T Blikslager1, Amanda L Ziegler1.
Abstract
Lower survival has been reported in foals than adults with small intestinal strangulating obstruction (SISO), but age-dependent outcomes have not been examined directly. Hospital records were collected from five US academic referral hospitals. It was hypothesized that foals would exhibit lower survival than case-matched adults. Foal cases 6-months-of-age or younger, and adult cases between 2- and 20-years-of-age were collected. Data revealed 24 of 25 (96.0%) foals and 66 of 75 (88.0%) adults that were recovered from surgery for SISO survived to hospital discharge. Sixteen of the total 41 (39.0%) foals studied were euthanized intraoperatively, whereas 30 of 105 (28.6%) adults were euthanized intraoperatively. Common lesions in foals that were recovered from surgery were volvulus (n = 13) and intussusception (n = 5), whereas common lesions in adults were volvulus (n = 25) and strangulating lipoma (n = 23). This study was limited by incomplete medical records, relatively small sample size, and lack of long-term follow-up. Unexpectedly, short-term survival tended to be higher in foals than adults and may have been partly driven by case selection prior to referral or surgery or decision-making intraoperatively. More optimism toward surgical treatment of foals with SISO may be warranted.Entities:
Keywords: colic; foal; horse; ischemia; small intestinal strangulating obstruction; surgery
Year: 2022 PMID: 35681837 PMCID: PMC9179310 DOI: 10.3390/ani12111374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
Figure 1Case selection and inclusion flow chart.
Figure 2Age affects intraoperative decision in foals. (a) shows the frequency distribution of foals by days of age, binned by months. The full population of all foal cases collected was not normally distributed, and appears to be skewed right, with more younger foals presenting than older foals (mean = 67.34 days-of-age, median = 42 days-of-age) (Shapiro–Wilk normality test p = 0.0002, W = 0.8655). (b) When separated based on intraoperative decision, the population of foals euthanized during surgery was normally distributed, while the population of foals recovered from surgery was not (mean = 65.34 days of age, median = 40 days of age) (Shapiro–Wilk normality test p= 0.071, W = 0.8966 and p = 0.0021, W = 0.8490, respectively). (c) The full population of adult cases collected was not normally distributed, and appears to have a bimodal shape, with younger and older adults presenting more frequently than adult horses between 10 and 16 years of age (n = 20 horses between 17 and 18 years of age, n = 22 horses between 6 and 8 years of age) (Shapiro–Wilk normality test p < 0.0001, W = 0.9326). (d) When separated by intraoperative decision, both the population of adults that were euthanized in surgery and recovered from surgery were not normally distributed, (Shapiro–Wilk normality test p = 0.0175, W = 0.9127 and p = 0.0009, W = 0.9358, respectively).
Figure 3Similar proportions of foals and adults were euthanized intraoperatively, and short-term survival was higher in foals than adult case-controls. (a) Of 41 foals, 16 (39.0%) were euthanized intraoperatively, while 30 of 105 (28.6%) adults were euthanized intraoperatively. (b) Of 25 foals, 24 (96.0%) survived to hospital discharge, while only 66 of 75 (88.0%) adult case-controls survived to hospital discharge.
Figure 4Long-term follow-up shows higher survival rates in adult case-controls. Of 13 adults and 5 foals, 2 adults and 2 foals were euthanized 1-month post-operatively for adhesions. Follow-up shows 84.62% survival in available adults, and 60% survival in available foals. The break in the x-axis spans time in which no horses died or were lost to follow-up. Tick marks on the survival curve indicate a horse that was lost to follow-up.
Univariate analyses of risk factors affecting survival.
| Variable | Foals Survived (%) | Adults Survived (%) | Odds Ratio | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Range 1d-6m | Range 2–10y | 1.005 | 0.9968 to 1.013 |
| Mean 2.18m | Mean 11.05y | |||
| No resection | 15 (93.75) | 37 (88.10) | 1.0 | N/A |
| Resection | 9 (100) | 28 (84.85) | 1.003 | 0.8143 to 1.148 |
| No External Hernia | 20 (95.24) | 52 (85.25) | 1.0 | N/A |
| External Hernia | 4 (100) | 14 (100) | 1.139 | 0.05805 to 7.332 |
| No Volvulus | 12 (100) | 47 (94) | 1.0 | N/A |
| Volvulus | 12 (92.31) | 19 (76) | 3.843 | 0.9964 to 18.76 |
| Non-Thoroughbred | 16 (100) | 50 (90.91) | 1.0 | N/A |
| Thoroughbred | 8 (88.89) | 15 (75) | 2.750 | 0.7085 to 10.71 |
| Non-Quarter Horse | 23 (95.83) | 57 (90.48) | 1.0 | N/A |
| Quarter Horse | 1 (100) | 9 (75) | 3.078 | 0.5978 to 13.01 |