+ All Categories
Home > Health & Medicine > Large Animal Orchiectomy

Large Animal Orchiectomy

Date post: 07-May-2015
Category:
Upload: dane-tatarniuk
View: 1,612 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Powerpoint complimenting written lecture notes discussing equine and food animal castration, surgical considerations, and complications. Prepared for lecture to 2nd year veterinary students.
33
Large Animal Orchiectomy (Castration Lecture) Dane Tatarniuk, DVM Resident, Large Animal Surgery April 5 th , 2013
Transcript
Page 1: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Large Animal Orchiectomy(Castration Lecture)

Dane Tatarniuk, DVMResident, Large Animal Surgery

April 5th, 2013

Page 2: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Terminology

• castration, • orchiectomy, • emasculation, • gelding, • cutting,

Page 3: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Equine Castration

• Overview– Age– Indication for surgery• Behavior• Neoplasia• Inguinal herniation• Testicular trauma

Page 4: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Anatomy

• Scrotum• Testicle• Epididymis• Tunica

Vaginalis– Parietal Tunic– Visceral Tunic

• Inguinal Canal

Page 5: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Anatomy

• Spermatic Cord• Cremaster Muscle

Page 6: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Pre-operative Considerations

• Systemically healthy• Palpation– Two testicles descended?

• Vaccination– Tetanus

• NSAIDs– Bute, Banamine

• Antibiotics– Penicillin, Ceftiofur

Page 7: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Supplies

• General instrument pack • Sterile gloves • Scrub • Emasculators • Suture • Ropes • Towels • +/- IV catheter

Page 8: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Standing Castration• Advantages

– Less cost & assistance– Quicker– Choice if poor anesthetic candidate

• Disadvantages– Vulnerable position– Avoid on small horses, donkey’s, mules– Assess temperament prior

• Sedation– Alpha-2 agonist +/- butorphanol

• Local Analgesia– Essential to castrating standing– Spermatic cord or intra-testicle

• Position– Tight to horse, keep head up, use reach of arms.

Page 9: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Recumbent Castration

• Environment– Field conditions– Hospital conditions

• Anesthesia • Xylazine followed by

ketamine & diazepam

• Recumbancy– Left lateral vs. dorsal

• Rope Restraint– Tie the limbs to

maintain safety

Page 10: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Open Castration

• Incision– Through both scrotum and

parietal tunic• Dissection

– Ligament of tail of epididymis• Exteriorization

– Testicle and spermatic cord• +/- Ligation

– Hemostasis– Foreign material

• Emasculation• Leaves parietal tunic behind

Page 11: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Emasculation

• “Nut to Nut”• Held clamped for

minimum of 1 minute– Anecdotal rule of ‘1

minute per age year of horse’ often used

• Variable types of emasculators– Serra, White vs. Reimer

Page 12: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Closed Castration

• Incision– Only through scrotum, not

through parietal tunic• “Stripping”

– Dissection of scrotal fascia• Emasculation

– Parietal tunic vs. Cremaster muscle

• +/- primary closure– Decrease risk of herniation

and evisceration – Foreign material

Page 13: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Semi-Closed

• Incision– Scrotum– 2cm incision into parietal

tunic• Eversion of tunic

– Flip parietal tunic over thumb– Provides grip to aide in

retraction• Closed castration

– Emasculate spermatic cord followed by parietal tunic

Page 14: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Scrotal Healing

• Second Intention Healing– Drainage– Stretching incision– Trim excess fascial tissue

• Primary Closure– Technique

• Excellent hemostasis

– Environment• Sterile operating conditions

– Increased cost

Page 15: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Other

• Already anesthetized• Remove wolf teeth– 505 & 605

• Interfere with bit placement in the mouth

Page 16: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Post-Operative Recommendations

• Open Scrotal Incision– Movement

• Lunging at the trot daily

– Hydrotherapy• Decrease swelling

• Closed– Confinement to facilitate primary intention healing

• Isolation from mares– Active spermatozoa – 2 days min.

Page 17: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Complications

“The one who does not operate, does not have complications.”

Page 18: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Hemorrhage• Emasculator application

– Thick cords– Angle non-perpendicular– Instrument condition

• Testicular Artery– Some dripping normal, from scrotal vessels– Active stream of blood is not normal

• Treatment– Wait 20 – 30 min, observe– Sedate, re-grasp cord, ligate– Pack with gauze for 24 hours– Anesthetize and find bleeder

• Monitor yourself– Stay on farm or refer

Page 19: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Evisceration

• Prolapse of intestine / omental tissue through inguinal canal and scrotum

• Breed– Standardbreds, Drafts

• Clean and replace contents back into abdomen– May have to anestheize– Refer immediately

• Sequela– Strangulation of intestine– Septic peritonitis

Page 20: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Edema

• Common, normal result• Management– Exercise– Hydrotherapy

• If non-responsive,– Re-open scrotal incision– Promote further

drainage

Page 21: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Septic Funiculitis

• Definition: Infection of spermatic cord

• Open castration– More tissue left behind

• Treatment– Antibiotics– Drainage– Surgery

• Champignon vs. Scirrhous Cord – Streptococcus vs.

Staphylococcus

Page 22: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Clostridial Infection

• Clostridium tetani– Spastic paralysis

• Clostridium botulinum– Flaccid paralysis

• Malignant Edema– Tissue necrosis, cellulitis, fever, depression,

toxemia, death • Poor prognosis

Page 23: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Septic Peritonitis

• Anatomy– Vaginal cavity communicates

with abdomen• Treatment– NSAIDs– Antibiotics– Peritoneal Lavage

• Referral

Page 24: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Penile Damage

• Inadvertent emasculation of penis• Edema formation• Paraphimosis• Know your anatomy

Page 25: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Hydrocele

• Scrotal swelling– Excess abdominal fluid in vaginal cavity

• Open castration• Cosmetic problem– Usually painless

• Drainage not helpful– More abdominal fluid– Can introduce bacteria

• Surgery– Remove parietal tunic

Page 26: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Behavior

• Perpetual masculine behavior• Learned response• Older stallions• Warm owners

Page 27: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Cryptorchidism• Definition: Failure of one or more

testicles to descend• Location

– Abdominal vs. inguinal– Left vs. right

• Inherited• Diagnostic techniques

– Palpation, ultrasound, exploratory, hormone assays

• Surgical removal– Do not remove a descended testicle

if the other testicle cannot be located.

Page 28: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Food Animal

• Principles of castration similar to equine

• Meat quality, behavior• Often performed by producer• Restraint alone vs.

sedation/anesthesia• Scrotal incision

– Overlying testicle– Transect distal 1/3rd

• Strip, +/- ligate, emasculate, etc.

Page 29: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Food Animal Tools

• Newberry knife– Splits scrotum in half– Good access– Good drainage

Page 30: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Food Animal Tools• Bloodless Castrators

– Elastrator– Callicrate

• Strangulation of vasculature -> atrophy -> necrosis• ~ 3 weeks• Small, young animals

Page 31: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Food Animal Tools

• Burdizzo– Crushes spermatic

cord from the outside

– May have to apply multiple times

– Testicles atrophy, don’t usually slough

Page 32: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Food Animal Tools

• Henderson castrating tool– Attached to power drill– Twisting motion– Good hemostasis in older animals

Page 33: Large Animal Orchiectomy

Conclusion

• Understand the anatomy, know your basic surgical principles, and evaluate the unique factors present (specie, purpose of animal, animal temperament, surgical environment, owner expectations, owner budget etc.)

• Recognize potential complications from castration and know how to manage them appropriately.

• There is no “one right way” to perform castration - the right way is to know every way and apply the appropriate technique to the individual / situation.


Recommended