• Title/Summary/Keyword: gastric impaction

Search Result 4, Processing Time 0.016 seconds

Report on the Symptoms of Surgical Gastric Disease of Dairy Cattle and its Surgical Finding (유우의 외과적위질환의 증상과 그 수술적소견에 관한 보고)

  • Cheong Chang Kook
    • Journal of the korean veterinary medical association
    • /
    • v.9 no.3
    • /
    • pp.3-12
    • /
    • 1965
  • From the clinical observations and surgical interferences made on the fifteen cases surgical gastric disease of dairy cows in the field, the following conclusion regarding to the traumatic reticulitis, omasal impaction and abomasal displacement may made .

  • PDF

Gizzard impaction and duodenal perforation in a yellow-billed spoonbill (Platalea leucorodia)

  • Ho-Seong, Cho;Yeonsu, Oh
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Service
    • /
    • v.45 no.4
    • /
    • pp.331-335
    • /
    • 2022
  • A yellow-billed spoonbill kept at the zoo was found dead. As a result of the necropsy, the stomach (gizzard and proventriculus) and duodenum were full of undigested fish bones, and the undigested sharp fish bones were lodged in the gastric mucosa and clumped together, blocking the lumen. Thereafter, the intestinal wall was perforated and peritonitis occurred causing death. The cause of the fish spines becoming lodged in the gastrointestinal tract is unknown. It can only be assumed that there was a lack of a mechanism for the yellow-billed spoonbill in a zoo to go around and pick up grit or small stones and assist in mechanical crushing in the gizzard.

A Case of Chaunocephalosis by Chaunocephalus ferox (Digenea: Echinostomatidae) in an Oriental White Stork, Ciconia boyciana, in Korea

  • Choe, Seongjun;Lee, Dongmin;Park, Hansol;Jeon, Hyeong-Kyu;Lee, Youngsun;Na, Ki-Jeong;Park, Shi-Ryong;Eom, Keeseon S.
    • Parasites, Hosts and Diseases
    • /
    • v.54 no.5
    • /
    • pp.659-665
    • /
    • 2016
  • We intended to describe a case of chaunocephalosis and morphological characteristics of its causative agent, Chaunocephalus ferox, recovered from an oriental white stork, Ciconia boyciana, in the Republic of Korea. An oriental white stork was referred to the Wildlife Center of Chungbuk in Korea in February 2014 for severe depression with cachexia and it died the next day. At necropsy, the stomach was severely expanded and 7 thick-walled nodules were observed in the upper part of the intestine. Although the stomach was filled with full of foreign materials, the intestine was almost empty. The nodules were globular and total 9 flukes were recovered. They were $8,030-8,091{\mu}m$ in length and $3,318-3,333{\mu}m$ in maximum width. Because the flukes had bulbous forebody with short narrow subcylindrical hindbody, 27 collar spines, and vitelline follicles not reaching to the posterior end, the specimens were identified as being C. ferox. The cyst formation induced thickening of the intestinal wall with narrowing of the lumen that could have contributed to the gastric impaction to the death of the host. This is the first described case of chaunocephalosis and its causative agent C. ferox found from an oriental white stork in Korea.

Management of Gastrointestinal Foreign Body Ingested during Dental Procedure (위장관으로 흡인된 치과기구의 처치)

  • Pang, Nan-Sim;Lee, Kang-Hee;Kim, Young Jin;Jung, Bock-Young
    • Journal of The Korean Dental Society of Anesthesiology
    • /
    • v.13 no.2
    • /
    • pp.45-49
    • /
    • 2013
  • Foreign body indigestion during dental procedures is uncommon but sometimes associated with severe and life threatening morbidity. The dentist should decide whether multidisciplinary intervention is necessary and how urgently it has to be done. The active removal of foreign bodies depends on the size, shape, type and duration of impaction, along with the location in the gastrointestinal tract. In this report, we presented how to manage gastric foreign body related swallowing during dental procedure and investigated the predictive risk factors, precaution, and prompt management in foreign body ingestion.