Difference between revisions of "Small Animal Soft Tissue Surgery Q&A 17"
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Revision as of 13:51, 30 August 2011
A four-year-old, female Weimaraner developed this swelling overnight. The dog has no history of otitis and does not scratch her ears. The owner reports the the dog is kept in a fenced-in yard and enjoys running up and down the fence-line with the neighbor’s dogs.
Question | Answer | Article | |
What is the diagnosis? | Aural hematoma: blood accumulation between the cartilage layers of the pinna from ruptured branches of the great auricular artery on the inside of the auricular cartilage. |
[[|Link to Article]] | |
List three potential causes for this condition. | Causes include trauma, parasites, otitis, aural foreign body, and ear canal tumors or polyps. This dog’s hematoma was due to trauma. |
[[|Link to Article]] | |
Describe several procedures to correct this problem. Make sure to discuss postoperative management. | There are numerous ways to repair aural hematomas.
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[[|Link to Article]] |