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Aggressive medical treatment should be initiated after surgical removal to reduce the likelihood of stricture formation.  This should include:
 
Aggressive medical treatment should be initiated after surgical removal to reduce the likelihood of stricture formation.  This should include:
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*'''Withdrawal of oral food for 2-3 days''' as standard but, if the inflammation is severe or rupture has occurred, a '''gastrostomy tube''' may be required.
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*'''Oral sucralfate suspension''' is thought to bind to the base of any ulcers, to stimulate epithelial repair and to neutralise any refluxed gastric juices.
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*'''[[Gastroprotective Drugs|Gastric acid secretory inhibitors]]''' (e.g. ranitidine, omeprazole) can be useful in cases of gastro-oesophageal reflux.
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*'''Metaclopramide''', a promotility drug that increases the tone of the lower oesophageal sphincter, may also be used to manage gastro-oesophageal reflux but not if oesophageal motility is thought to be impaired (i.e., if megaoesophagus is present).
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*'''Broad spectrum intra-venous bactericidal antibiotics''' may be required in animals with severe oesophagitis or mediastinitis. 
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*'''Analgesia''' should be provided to encourage animals to eat after 2-3 days.
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*'''Anti-inflammatory doses of [[Steroids|corticosteroids]]''' (such as prednisolone) may be used to prevent fibrosis and further stricture formation in acute injuries but caution should be exercised if the animal has concurrent aspiration pneumonia.
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*withdrawal of oral food for 24-48hrs
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Further procedures are also indicated to ensure that the surgery has not caused further damage:
*inspection of the oesophageal mucosa to assess for any damage.
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*'''Radiographs of the chest''' should be obtained immediately after surgery to check that pneumothorax or pneumomediastinum have not developed.
*thoracic radiographs to look for pneumothorax caused by oesophageal perforation.
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*'''Oesophagoscopy''' should be performed 2-3 weeks after the surgery to ensure that strictures have not developed at the site of the obstruction.
*[[Antibiotics|antibiotic therapy]].
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*administration of [[Gastroprotective Drugs|gastroprotective drugs]] such as H<sub>2</sub> receptor antagonists or proton pump inhibitors.
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*[[Drugs Acting on the Intestines|prokinetic agents]].
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*gastrotomy feeding tube.
      
==Prognosis==
 
==Prognosis==
Animals with oesophageal foreign bodies without perforation carry a good prognosis. Those with oesophageal perforation carry a guarded prognosis depending on the degree of thoracic contamination.
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Animals with oesophageal foreign bodies without perforation carry a good prognosis. Those with oesophageal perforation carry a guarded prognosis depending on the degree of thoracic contamination.  Surgical removal of foreign bodies is associated with more adverse effects than endoscopic removal.
    
==References==
 
==References==
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