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3:50 PM   September 02, 2010
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Complications? What Complications?

By Phil Zeltzman, DVM, Dipl. ACVS

Complications after a spay are more common than one might think. Slatter’s Textbook of Small Animal Surgery reports the following complication rates in the “Ovary and Uterus” chapter:

  • 18 percent overall complications in one study.
  • 33 percent suture reactions in another one.

Some complications include:

  • Hemorrhage (the most common cause of death).
  • Ovarian remnant syndrome.
  • Uterine stump pyometra, inflammation and granuloma.
  • Fistulous tracts, typically due to braided, non-absorbable suture material used as ligatures.
  • Ligation of a ureter.
  • Urinary incontinence in 11 percent to 20 percent of cases.
  • Weight gain of 26 percent to 38 percent.

Additionally, problems related to any abdominal surgery include anesthesia complications, delayed wound healing or dehiscence, incisional infection, self-trauma to the incision and retained gauze square. <HOME>

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