Difference between revisions of "Bloat"
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| Also known as: | | Also known as: | ||
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Revision as of 10:39, 26 July 2010
This article is still under construction. |
Description
Signalment
Diagnosis
Clinical signs
Treatment
Prognosis
References
- When eructation fails, the rumen becomes distended due to the accumulation of gas produced by the fermentation process. This distension is known as bloat or tympany.
Clinical
- The disease is acute and progressive and will result in death in a matter of hours.
Pathology
- In severe bloating, that the rumen almost fills the abdomen.
- Diaphragm is displaced forwards, compressing the lungs.
- Posterior vena cava (lying dorsally) is also compressed, reducing the venous return to the heart.
- Respiration is depressed and animals die from anoxia.
- Blood is dark (hypoxic) and clots poorly.
- The anterior parts of the body are often characteristically acutely congested.
- Oedema and subcutaneous haemorrhage of head and neck tissues.
- Oesophageal "bloat line" at thoracic inlet.
- Congested and haemorrhagic cranially, pale caudally.
Pathogenesis
- There are two forms of bloat:
- Frothy bloat/ Primary bloat
- Occurs following ingestion of large amounts of succulent green plant material. This is highly fermentable and produces large amounts of gas.
- Material contains high levels of soluble proteins. These act as foaming agents by reducing surface tension but increasing surface viscosity of rumenal liquids and a stable rumenal foam forms.
- The volatile fatty acids of the plant material consumed lower pH, optimising conditions for formation of froth.
- Gas present in bubble form is insufficient to trigger eructation, and so the rumen becomes distended.
- Free gas bloat/ Secondary bloat
- May be:
- Acute
- Due to sudden oesophageal obstruction, for example by a solid foreign body (e.g. a piece of potato or turnip).
- Chronic
- Results from partial oesophageal obstruction/ compression, or from interference with the normal eructation mechanism, e.g. with:
- partially obstructive foreign bodies
- actinobacillosis in the oesophagus or oesophageal groove
- oesophagus or groove tumours
- chronic inflammatory or adhesive disease of the reticulum
- Some passage of gas is possible, so gas build-up and distenesion is more prolonged.
- Interference with cardiac and respiratory function is seldom life threatening.
- Results from partial oesophageal obstruction/ compression, or from interference with the normal eructation mechanism, e.g. with:
- Acute
- May be:
- Frothy bloat/ Primary bloat
Also known as: | Ruminal tympany |