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Guttural pouch mycosis in horses: a retrospective study of 28 cases
49
Citations
14
References
2012
Year
Retrospective StudyEquine-assisted TherapyNasal DischargeAnimal ScienceVeterinary SurgeryVeterinary PathologyVeterinary ScienceVeterinary ResearchEducationFifty PercentSurgeryGuttural Pouch MycosisAnatomyMedicineAnesthesiologySurvival Rate
The medical records of 28 horses with guttural pouch mycosis were reviewed. The most commonly observed clinical signs were nasal discharge, epistaxis, dysphagia and/or cough. All 28 horses had the disease unilaterally, however, in five of them, it had spread into the contralateral pouch via the mesial septum. Three horses were treated medically, 11 horses underwent surgery and seven horses were treated both medically and surgically. Fifty percent of horses (14/28) were euthanased or died, fifty percent of horses (14/28) survived. There was no significant correlation between treatment method (medical, surgical, combination) and survival rate. The most common reason for euthanasia was dysphagia due to pharyngeal dysfunction. There was a highly significant correlation between the presence of dysphagia and non‐survival (p=0.008).
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