Difference between revisions of "Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care Medicine: Self-Assessment Color Review, Second Edition, Q&A 14"

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Latest revision as of 09:38, 26 November 2018


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Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care Medicine 2E Q14.png


A 5-year-old male German Shepherd Dog presented approximately 10 minutes after being stabbed in the chest. The owner had tied the dog outside a mini market for 5 minutes and returned to find the dog standing with a knife in his side (see image). Small drops of blood were found on the dog’s hairs and and on the side-walk. T = 38.4°C (101.2°F); HR = 160 bpm; RR = panting; CRT = 1 sec; MM dark pink, dry; skin turgor normal; femoral pulses bounding. The entire knife blade is firmly embedded in the chest. No other external wounds visible.

Question Answer Article
Provide general guidelines for the transport of an animal with a penetrating foreign body. Link to Article
Provide an initial diagnostic and therapeutic plan for this dog. Link to Article
The knife blade is totally embedded within the paravertebral muscles with no penetration into the pulmonary cavity. How do you remove the blade? Link to Article
What complications are anticipated? Link to Article


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