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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Congenital diaphragmatic hernia with concurrent aplasia of the pericardium in a foal.

Journal:
BMC veterinary research
Year:
2015
Authors:
Tăbăran, Alexandru-Flaviu et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Veterinary Pathology
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

This case describes a rare situation in a female Friesian foal that was stillborn after a normal delivery. During the examination, it was found that there was a large hole in the diaphragm, which is the muscle that helps with breathing, allowing parts of the intestines, spleen, and liver to move into the chest cavity. Additionally, the foal had a significant absence of the pericardium, the protective sac around the heart, which is also unusual in horses. The left lung was very underdeveloped, and the liver showed signs of damage due to the abnormal positioning. This case is notable because it documents a combination of these two rare conditions in a horse for the first time.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In veterinary medicine congenital abnormalities of the diaphragm and pericardium are rare, idiopathic malformations, being reported mainly in dogs. This report documents an unusual case of developmental defects in a foal consisting of diaphragmatic hernia concurrent with pericardial aplasia. CASE PRESENTATION: Following a normal delivery, a full term, female Friesian stillborn foal with the placenta was presented for necropsy. External morphological examination indicated a normally developed foal. At necropsy, a large oval defect (approximately 20 × 15 cm in size) was observed in the left-dorsal side of the diaphragm (left lumbocostal triangle). This defect allowed the intestinal loops, spleen and partially the liver to translocate into the thorax. The loops of the left ascending colon, including the pelvic flexure and partially the small intestine covered the cranial and dorsal posterior parts of the heart due to the complete absence of the left pericardium. The remaining pericardium presented as a white, semi-transparent strip, partially covering the right side of the heart. The left lung and the main bronchus were severely hypoplastic to approximately one-fifth the size of their right homologue. The intermediate part of the liver, containing mainly the enlarged quadrate lobe was translocated in the thorax, severely enlarged and showed marked fibrosis. Histologically in the herniated lobes we diagnosed hepatic chronic passive congestion, telangiectasia and medial hypertrophy of blood vessels. CONCLUSION: Concomitant malformation involving diaphragmatic hernia and pericardial aplasia in horses have not been previously reported. Moreover, this is the first case describing pericardial aplasia in horse.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26715552/