犬类创伤患者的手术干预和疗效。

IF 1.1 3区 农林科学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care Pub Date : 2024-02-26 DOI:10.1111/vec.13365
Corey J. Fisher DVM, Taylor Adams DVM, David Liss DVM, Amanda A. Cavanagh DVM, DACVECC, Sarah J. Marvel DVM, DACVS, Kelly E. Hall DVM, MS, DACVECC
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的确定接受手术(急诊室或手术室)和非手术治疗的犬类创伤患者的信号、损伤类型、创伤严重程度评分和预后,以及手术时间、所涉及的专科服务和手术费用:环境:大学教学医院:环境:大学教学医院:2017年5月至2020年7月期间因外伤就诊的1630只犬:测量和主要结果:比较了接受手术室手术(12.8%,208/1630)、急诊室手术(39.1%,637/1630)或无手术干预(48.2%,785/1630)的犬类创伤患者的人口统计学和结果。在两组手术患者中,98.9%(836/845)的患者在出院后存活,而非手术组的存活率为 92.2%(724/785)(P 结论:在犬类创伤患者中,手术干预是一种有效的治疗方法:对犬类创伤患者进行手术治疗似乎与较高的存活率有关,在手术组中,急诊室手术组和普通手术组的死亡率最高。手术室手术干预,尤其是普外科和神经内科手术干预与住院时间延长、费用增加和动物创伤分诊评分升高有关。
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Surgical interventions and outcome in a population of canine trauma patients

Objective

To determine signalment, injury type, trauma severity score, and outcome of canine trauma patients undergoing surgical (emergency room [ER] or operating room [OR]) and nonsurgical treatment in addition to time to surgery, specialty services involved, and cost in the OR surgery population.

Design

Retrospective evaluation of medical record and hospital trauma registry data on canine trauma cases.

Setting

University teaching hospital.

Animals

One thousand six hundred and thirty dogs presenting for traumatic injury between May 2017 and July 2020.

Interventions

None.

Measurements and Main Results

Demographics and outcome were compared for canine trauma patients undergoing OR surgery (12.8%, 208/1630), ER surgery (39.1%, 637/1630), or no surgical intervention (48.2%, 785/1630). Among the 2 surgical groups, 98.9% (836/845) survived to discharge compared with 92.2% (724/785) of the nonsurgical group (P < 0.0001). The OR surgical group had significantly higher median Animal Trauma Triage scores (2 vs 1, P < 0.0001) and median days in hospital (2 vs < 1, P < 0.0001) compared with the other groups. For the OR surgical cohort, electronic medical records were reviewed to determine the specialty surgery service involved, time to and duration of anesthesia and surgery, and visit cost. The most common surgery services involved were orthopedics (45.2%, 94/208) and general surgery (26.9%, 56/208). Neurology and general surgery cases required the longest median length of stay in hospital, and ophthalmology and dentistry cases required the shortest. The median cost of visit was highest in neurology ($10,032) and lowest in ophthalmology ($2305) and dentistry ($2404).

Conclusions

Surgical intervention in canine trauma patients appears to be associated with higher survival rates, and among the surgery groups, mortality was highest in the ER and general surgery groups. OR surgical intervention, in particular general surgery and neurology, was associated with increased length of hospitalization, increased cost, and higher Animal Trauma Triage scores.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
15.40%
发文量
121
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care’s primary aim is to advance the international clinical standard of care for emergency/critical care patients of all species. The journal’s content is relevant to specialist and non-specialist veterinarians practicing emergency/critical care medicine. The journal achieves it aims by publishing descriptions of unique presentation or management; retrospective and prospective evaluations of prognosis, novel diagnosis, or therapy; translational basic science studies with clinical relevance; in depth reviews of pertinent topics; topical news and letters; and regular themed issues. The journal is the official publication of the Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society, the American College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care, the European Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society, and the European College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care. It is a bimonthly publication with international impact and adheres to currently accepted ethical standards.
期刊最新文献
Fabio Viganó Jennifer J. Devey Issue Information - Prelim AUTHOR INDEX Abstracts from the International Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Symposium and the European Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Annual Congress 2024
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