Intestinal Arterial Thromboembolism
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- Non-strangulation infarction.
- There is often a functional obstruction at point of infarction.
- Relatively rare as the bowel has a good anastomosing blood supply.
Horses
- E.g. Strongylus vulgaris larvae migrating in cranial mesenteric artery in horse
- Cause arteritis with thickening of wall
- Due to fibrin and debris deposition and hypersensitivity reaction
- Leads to vasoconstriction
- May occlude lumen and encourage thromboemboli.
- Can cause ischaemic necrosis of a segment of small intestine
- Is less common now that Strongylus vulgaris infections are declining.
- Cause arteritis with thickening of wall
- E.g. equine salmonellosis.
Verminous endarteritis
- Caused by larvae of S. vulgaris within the cranial mesenteric artery
- Also called "verminous aneurism" (misnomer as aneurism = dilatation/thinning of blood vessel wall; also, aneurisms are rare)
- Wall of artery grossly thickened (organising thrombi, inflammatory responses)
- Can be detected on rectal palpation
- Many cases asymptomatic
- May get embolism → infarction of areas of intestinal wall → colic or chronic ulceration (note: generally good collateral circulation; therefore colic is not inevitable)
- Aberrant larvae may cause thrombosis in other arteries; e.g. iliac, cerebral, coronary
- Avermectin/milbemycins or fenbendazole are used to control migrating S. vulgaris larvae
Small Animals
- Especially dogs
- Road traffic accidents produce and infact in the gut.
- Renal disease also causes infarction.
- Particularly nephrotic syndrome.
- Anticoagulant proteins are lost in the urine, leading to a prothrombic state in the ciruclation.
Pathology
- Similar to that caused by venous congestion.
- See sharply delineated dark areas in bowel that are flaccid with loss of tone.
- These become necrotic followed later by peritonitis.