Gastric Ulceration - all species
Gastric Ulceration - Cattle
Horse
Gastric Ulceration - all species
- Affects the pars oesophagea (margo plicatus) in adults and foals.
- Due to parasites - Gasterophilus (Bots).
- Bots are not as common as they once were.
- Look like big pink maggots.
- Killed by Ivermectin.
- Gasterophilus leave large ulcers in glandular regions of the stomach.
- Ulcers / erosions are quite deep.
- The parasites are believed to be non-pathogenic, but in large numbers they probably produce some discomfort and poor growth.
- Carcinoma can also produce ulceration in the stomach of the horse as, in other species.
- In foals, the glandular area may sometimes be affected.
- This may be e.g. stress-related, or due to used of NSAIDs.
Dog
Gastric Ulceration - all species
- Although ulcers are often secondary to other diseases, primary idiopathic peptic ulcers do occur, due to
- Hyperacidity
- Gastric carcinoma in older dog
- Secondary ulcers are often associated with systemic diseases particularly uraemia and mast cell tumours. Gastric ulcer may be the cause of death but is not the primary disease.
- Mast cell tumours
- Boxers and Labradors are predisposed to these.
- Vomit continually together with abdominal pain.
- Ulcers are usually near the duodenum.
- Frequently secondarily infected.
- Often penetrate deeply.
- Actively secreting mast cell tumours produce histame, leasing to gastric hyperacidity and therefore secondary peptic ulcers.
- Uraemia
- Gastric lesions usually occur with chronic renal disease.
- Gastrin is produced by the G cells of the gastric antrum during the gastric phase of digestion .
- Acts on H2 receptors on parietal cells to increase production of HCl.
- Increases release of histamine from gastric mucosal mast cells to increase HCl release.
- Serum levels of gastrin are increased in chronic renal disease in dogs and cats.
- Gastrin is produced by the G cells of the gastric antrum during the gastric phase of digestion .
- In acute renal failure death ensues before gastric ulceration develops.
- Pathogenesis
- Loss of nephron and medullary concentration gradient in chronic interstitial nephritis mean collecting ducts cannot resorb fluid.
- A common cause of interstitial nephritis in the dog was leptospirosis.
- Consequently, the animal drinks and urinates in enormous quantities, and urea is washed out with large quantities of fluid ("compensated renal failure").
- If fluid is restricted, urea cannot be washed out and the animal becomes uraemic.
- Urea in the stomach breaks down to ammonia, irritating the mucosa and contributing to gastric ulcer.
- Uraemia also causes arteriolar degeneration in the submucosa, leading to hypoxic damage to the mucosa. This is another contributing factor to gastric ulcer.
- Vomiting causes dehydration and further raises blood urea.
- A vicious circle is produced- ends in death by vomiting, dehydration and shock.
- Note: If an animal in compensated renal failure is given anaesthetic, it will not drink much. It then may start to vomit and die due to uraemia.
- Loss of nephron and medullary concentration gradient in chronic interstitial nephritis mean collecting ducts cannot resorb fluid.
- Gastric lesions usually occur with chronic renal disease.
- Mast cell tumours
- NSAIDs, Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (due to pancreatic gastrin-secreting tumour), cirrhosis and bile reflux can all also cause gastric ulcers in the dog.
Pig
Gastric Ulceration - all species
- Gastic ulceration is quite common in the pig- May be seen in 50-60% of pigs arriving at slaughterhouses.
- Has serious economic consequences.
- Clinical
- Occasionally a well-grown pig will drop dead.
- Deep ulcers have eroded into a blood vessel, causing massive haemorrhage into the stomach from and producing death very rapidly.
- If long standing ulcers do not result in death, they do produce pain and discomfort.
- Give low growth rate and poor feed conversion.
- Occasionally a well-grown pig will drop dead.
- Pathogenesis
- Gastric ulceration is associated with modern pig rearing, but the exact cause is unknown.
- Causes are associated with gastric hyperacidity, and gastric ulceration is probably a multifactorial disease.
- The following are suggested as possible causes:
- Infection, e.g. Candida albicans, Streptococci, Staphylococci and mixes of these.
- Copper toxicity- this is probably more significant.
- Pigs are fed copper as growth promoter; 50 ppm is know to be toxic, and animals are often fed 250 ppm.
- Vitamin E / Selenium deficiency.
- Feeding on concrete floors.
- Sand is licked up whe pigs eat.
- Feeding finely milled cereal.
- Stress
- Possibly genetic factors.
- Pathology
- Most commonly affects pars oesophagea (squamous or non-glandular portion).
- Starts with hyperkeratosis in the stratum corneum
- Appears rough and thickened
- May stop at this stage.
- In approximately 30% of animals, the lesion starts to erode and quite deep ulcers may develop.
- In a significant small number ,very deep ulcers develop and may affect virtually all of pars oesophagea.
- Histologically, ulcers are large and flask-shaped ulcer with fibrin, necrosis, erosion and fibrosis at base.
Pages in category "Gastric Ulceration"
The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.