1 / 23

Esophageal Choke

Esophageal Choke. Horse Owners Seminar March 17, 2007 Carla Sommardahl. My horse is choking??? . Heimlich maneuver will not help!! Esophagus = muscular tube leading from throat to stomach Horse can still breath Esophagus blocked by a foreign object most commonly

macon
Télécharger la présentation

Esophageal Choke

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. Esophageal Choke Horse Owners Seminar March 17, 2007 Carla Sommardahl

  2. My horse is choking??? • Heimlich maneuver will not help!! • Esophagus = muscular tube leading from throat to stomach • Horse can still breath • Esophagus blocked by a foreign object most commonly • Tumors or scar tissue from previous choke

  3. Normal Anatomy

  4. Common Sites of Obstruction • Esophageal opening • Mid cervical region • Thoracic inlet • Terminal Esophagus = Cardia

  5. Potential areasof obstruction!

  6. Common foreign objects • Pellets, Grain, beet pulp • Hay, grass clippings • Pieces of fruit, commercial treats • Hay or alfalfa cubes • Baling twine, twigs, wood shavings • Any improperly chewed feedstuff

  7. Signs of Choke • Excess drooling of saliva with feed material or froth from mouth • Heavy nasal discharge with feed material and froth

  8. Signs of Choke • Extend head and neck • Restless behavior • Difficulty swallowing • Cough, retching • Colic

  9. What can you do? • Call your veterinarian = Medical emergency • Damage to esophagus can lead to scar tissue • Aspiration of fluid into lungs = pneumonia • Remove all feed and water • Put in unbedded stall

  10. What will your veterinary do? • Complete physical exam • Sedation to relax horse and lower head • Passage of a nasogastric tube to identify obstructed location • Lavage of esophagus with head down

  11. Further Examination • Endoscopy of the esophagus • Assess damage • Better view obstruction • Radiographs of the neck area with and without contrast • Radiographs of the lungs

  12. Complicated or Severe Choke • Hospitalization for fluid therapy and monitoring • Anesthesia to remove object more easily • Surgery • Last resort if object cannot be removed or is not digestible • Incision made into esophagus

  13. Prognosis • Good in most cases (< 24 hours duration) • Depends on: • Length of time obstructing material remains in esophagus • Damage to esophagus • Previous episodes

  14. Complications of Choke • Dehydration • Electrolyte imbalances • Aspiration pneumonia • Upper airway irritation and inflammation

  15. Complications of Damage to Esophagus • Esophagitis • Motility disorders • Esophageal ulcers and stricture (scar tissue) • Esophageal diverticulum • Pocket formed from stretching of esophagus, traps food • Esophageal rupture or tear

  16. Aftercare • Gruel diet until esophagus has healed • Senior or complete feed soaked in warm water • Small frequent meals best • No hay or grass

  17. Prevention • Proper dental care • Yearly exams and floating • More frequent in older horses • Rapid eaters • Feed separately to avoid competition • Place large rock or salt block in bucket • Good quality hay • Avoid grass clippings

  18. Prevention • Older horses or horses with previous choke • Avoid dry pelleted feeds and beet pulp • Moisten prior to feeding. • Avoid hay cubes or large fibrous horse treats if new to horse

  19. Tennessee Lottery Winner

More Related