1 / 126

GI, Free air, Lymph Nodes

GI, Free air, Lymph Nodes. Dr. LeeAnn Pack Dipl. AVCR. Esophagus - Anatomy. UES & LES Dorsal to the larynx Left of the trachea Dorsal to the heart Enters abdomen via esophageal hiatus. Esophagus - Function. 3 Stages oropharyngeal esophageal gastroesophageal

afram
Télécharger la présentation

GI, Free air, Lymph Nodes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GI, Free air, Lymph Nodes Dr. LeeAnn Pack Dipl. AVCR

  2. Esophagus - Anatomy • UES & LES • Dorsal to the larynx • Left of the trachea • Dorsal to the heart • Enters abdomen via esophageal hiatus

  3. Esophagus - Function • 3 Stages • oropharyngeal • esophageal • gastroesophageal • Goal = to transport ingesta

  4. The Normal Esophagus - Survey Radiographs • Normally not seen • May be seen with: • Gas and or metal/mineral in lumen • In patients with pneumomediastinum • Aerophagia - commonly see esophagus

  5. The Esophagram! • Indications • Technique • What’s normal? • Common radiographic esophageal abnormalities

  6. Esophagram - Indications • Radiographic &/or C/S of esophageal disease • Regurgitation • Dysphagia • Anorexia / Weight loss • Recurrent secondary pneumonia • To ID location, size and shape of the esophagus

  7. Esophagram - Technique • Lateral recumbency • Administer contrast media • Barium paste (mucosal detail) • Barium liquid ( luminal / motility evaluation) • Organic Iodine (if suspect a perforation) • Be Careful with this --> pulmonary edema • Make exposure when patient swallows

  8. Contrast Agents

  9. Esophagram – What’s Normal? • Peristalsis • Dogs - longitudinal folds (skeletal) • Cats - longitudinal folds – cranial (2/3) (skeletal) and oblique folds caudal (1/3) (smooth) = herringbone pattern

  10. Radiographic Abnormalities • Pooling of contrast / Dilation • Hypo-motility • Adherence of the contrast to the mucosa • Constriction / Narrowed lumen • Filling defects

  11. Megaesophagus • Focal or diffuse esophageal dilation with hypo-motility • Congenital / Acquired • Numerous causes • Aspiration pneumonia - secondary

  12. Generalized Megaesophagus

  13. Generalized Megaesophagus

  14. Vascular Ring Anomaly • Congenital malformation of great vessels • PRAA - young dogs • Radiographic appearance • esophageal dilation cranial to heart base • ventral displacement of trachea • pooling of contrast cranial to constriction • normal or hypo-motile caudal esophagus

  15. Survey Films

  16. With Barium

  17. PRAA – Segmental Megaesophagus

  18. More Examples of PRAA

  19. Esophageal Foreign Bodies • Soft Tissue, Mineral or Metal density • Common sites: • thoracic inlet, heart base, LES • Radiographic appearance • focal distention of the esophagus • pneumomediastinum, pleural effusion, mediastinal fluid, strictures

  20. Fish Hook with String

  21. Esophageal Neoplasia • Primary - ACA, LMS, SCC, FS, OSA • Metastatic - more common • Spirocerca lupi • May see obstruction, stricture, mass

  22. Esophageal Hernias • Hiatal • most common - congenital or traumatic • Paraesophageal • Gastroesophageal intussusception • All appear as increase ST opacity - caudal mediastinum/esophagus • esophagram to confirm

  23. Hiatal Hernia Esophagus Stomach

  24. Gastroesophageal Intussusception

  25. Esophagus - Other • Esophageal strictures • Esophageal diverticula • brachycephalic breeds - normal at thoracic inlet • out-pouching of the esophagus • 2° to obstruction, stricture, or vascular ring anomaly

  26. Stomach - Anatomy • Cardia, fundus, body, pyloric antrum, pyloric canal • Where are they located??? • Air and fluid are our friends! • Left lateral - air in pylorus, fluid in fundus • Right lateral - air in fundus, fluid in pylorus • VD – Gas in body and pyloric antrum • DV – Gas in the fundus

  27. Gastric Displacement • Cranial • Microhepatia • Diaphragmatic hernia • Caudal • Hepatomegaly • Hepatic mass

  28. The Normal Stomach

  29. FB in pylorus? Um no

  30. See how you can move things around?

  31. The Gastrogram! • Patient must be fasted! • Contrast Media • Barium suspension (5-8ml/lb) • Organic Iodine (if suspect perforation) • Room Air • All are administered by orogastric tube

  32. The Gastrogram! • Double contrast study - 1-2ml/lb Barium suspension followed by 5-10ml/lb of room air • All 4 views are made (VD, DV, both laterals) usually

  33. Gastric Dilation/Volvulus • Emergency • Must take both lateral views • stomach distended with gas and fluid • pylorus displaced dorsally and to left • compartmentalization • +/- splenomegaly, +/- hypovolemic changes • Gastric distention without torsion has normal location

  34. Popeye Arm = GDV

  35. GDV

  36. GDV with paralytic ileus

  37. GDV – note air in esophagus

  38. Gastric Distension (Bloat) • Stomach remains in the normal position but is significantly distended • Often seen after eating abnormal amounts of food • Usually just time to treat – frequent walks - monitor progression of ingesta

  39. Gastric Distension

  40. Gastric Ulcers • NSAIDS, 2° to other disease processes • Survey films usually normal • Gastrogram • ulcer crater appears as Barium filled plateau projecting away from the lumen • adjacent rugae may be thick • lesser curvature & pyloric region

  41. Gastric Neoplasia • ACA, LSA, MCT, LMS • Survey films often normal - may have thick wall or see mass in lumen if surrounded by air • See ulcers, filling defects, static / non-distensible wall • Pythium (fungal disease seen mostly in southern US – similar appearance to neoplasia)

  42. Gastric Foreign Body • May see on survey films • Bones, fish hooks, needles • FB’s not in the pylorus appear as filling defects • Porous FB (cloth) retain contrast • Room air can be used • Don’t be afraid to repeat rads • in few hours

  43. Gastric FB

  44. Dummy

  45. Rock FB

  46. Sock FB

  47. Delayed Gastric Emptying • Pyloric disease • Iatrogenic - Drugs • Stress • Insufficient gastric distention with contrast

  48. Pyloric Outflow Obstruction • Survey films show a distended gas and fluid filled stomach • There is delayed gastric emptying of contrast and the pylorus is narrowed • gastric FB’s, plyoric spasms, pyloric hypertrophy, pyloric neoplasia • Ultrasound good to visualize this

  49. Chronic Pyloric Obstruction

More Related