– 8 yr old MN Bull dog in a wheel chair due hind paralysis (diagnosis unknown)
– presented with acute vomiting and pale mm; did not appear painful in the abdomen
– trace abdominal effusion seen between the liver and spleen
– the spleen is enlarged and “meaty”looking (normal for breed vs abnormal); no colour flow at the splenic hilus (repeatable); hyperechoic surrounding fat
– the paranchyma does not show the typical hypoechoic lacey appearance described for splenic torsion but I am wondering if this could be an acute presentation?
– 8 yr old MN Bull dog in a wheel chair due hind paralysis (diagnosis unknown)
– presented with acute vomiting and pale mm; did not appear painful in the abdomen
– trace abdominal effusion seen between the liver and spleen
– the spleen is enlarged and “meaty”looking (normal for breed vs abnormal); no colour flow at the splenic hilus (repeatable); hyperechoic surrounding fat
– the paranchyma does not show the typical hypoechoic lacey appearance described for splenic torsion but I am wondering if this could be an acute presentation?
– also there appears to be a “perivenous hyperechoic triangle” at the level of the portal hilus decscribed in d’Anjou’s textbook
– no murphy sign during scanning but the dog is partially paralyzed and in diapers?
(echo normal, bloodwork and clotting profile pending)