Category:Oesophagus - Pathology
Revision as of 11:32, 28 May 2010 by Bara (talk | contribs) (→Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Other Species)
This article has been peer reviewed but is awaiting expert review. If you would like to help with this, please see more information about expert reviewing. |
Introduction
- The oesophagus is the part of alimentary tract that tends to go wrong least often.
- Failure of oesophageal function results in obstruction and in failure of ingesta to pass to the stomach.
- In the bovine there may also be failure of eructation and tympany may develop.
Defence Mechanisms
- The oesophagus has no serosa and is covered by the fibrous tissue of the neck and mediastinum, from which it derives its blood supply.
- Consequently, infection spreads easily and healing is more difficult.
- Oesophageal disease is therefore difficult to treat and is consequently very serious.
Upper Alimentary Tract Carcinoma Complex
Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Other Species
Traumatic Pathology
Impaction
Upper Block | Lower Block |
Acute vomiting | Gradual intestinal distention |
Dehydration | Mucosal destruction |
Alkalosis | Toxaemia |
Pre-renal azotaemia | Peritonitis |
- Commonly in cattle, horses and dogs.
- The most common sites of obstruction are the thoracic inlet, the base of the heart, and the hiatus oesophagus of the diaphragm, i.e.: the narrowest points.
Clinical Signs
Horse
- With foods that expand in oesophagus such as haylage etc.
- Also seen with whole apples.
Cattle
- May eat a spherical object that obstructs the oesophagus mostly in anterior 1/3rd of oesophagus and can often be palpated in live animal.
- Potatoes can be a cheap source of feed and if fed whole can become stuck in oesophagus.
- If obstruction occurs further down can be difficult to diagnose and remove.
- Cattle develop bloat when oesophagus obstructed.
- Apples fairly easily to dislodge.
Dog
- Usually with small bones
- Animals that feel protective of feed may gulp food down quickly, particularly if given small chops / knuckle bones.
- Knobbly shape may make bone lodge in oesophagus, particularly just anterior to heart.
- Very difficult to dislodge (because of shape).
- Pressure necrosis occurs very quickly around it and can erode through oesophagus within about 24 hours.
- Small bone may also lodge in duodenum if they pass through the stomach.
Rupture
- Perforation may occur with sharp foreign bodies. This may lead to cellulitis or pleurisy and other complications.
- Rupture of the oesophagus admits pathogenic organisms to the mediastinum and fascial planes of the neck. Both are composed of loose connective tissue and communicate with each other.
- Infection spreads rapidly as a cellulitis, aided possibly by peristalsis and pulsation of the carotid arteries, and soon leads to pleurisy.
- Rupture is almost always fatal.
Learning Tools
Pages in category "Oesophagus - Pathology"
The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.