Sentences with phrase «gi obstruction»

Unlike cats and dogs, ferrets with GI obstruction usually do not vomit.
Offer chews that can not be ingested, which can cause a GI obstruction.
Supervise your dog when she plays with plush toys to keep her from swallowing stuffing or squeakers, which... MORE can lead to GI obstruction.
Unfortunately, swallowing a toy could lead to a life - threatening airway or GI obstruction, so this is a factor that must always be considered when selecting toys for your pets.
Cats can have any number of medical emergencies during their lifetime, from GI obstructions, urinary blockages or viruses that stop them from eating to cat heart disease and kidney failure.

Not exact matches

It's possible to get a bowel obstruction due to disease or physical injury, «but red meat isn't something that blocks your GI tract.»
These may cause electrolyte imbalance, potassium loss and GI tract obstruction
What might seem like a simple bout of GI upset can sometimes be something more insidious like a bowel obstruction or a bacterial infection that's only cleared up by antibiotics.
Just about anything foreign can be ingested by a curious pet and can cause serious GI problems including obstruction of the GI tract.
Foreign Body, Intestinal Resection and Anastomosis, Enterotomy, Gastrotomy, Intestinal Perforation, Bowel Obstruction, Intestinal Obstruction, Linear Gastrointestinal Foreign Body, GI Foreign Body
What might seem like a simple bout of GI upset can sometimes be something more insidious like a bowel obstruction or a bacterial infection that's only cleared up by antibiotics.
Common diseases seen in most species of chelonians include respiratory infections, constipation, deficiency of vitamin A causing aural abscesses, stones in the urinary tract, obstructions of the GI tract caused by the ingestion of foreign bodies and penis prolapse.
Meat, poultry, or fish bones can also be dangerous if eaten, causing damage to the GI tract if they splinter or form an obstruction.
If there is repeated vomiting or diarrhea, this can lead to dangerous dehydration, or it may even be a symptom of other major problems such as an obstruction of the GI tract.
Foreign objects in the GI tract can cause an obstruction, and your pet may even require surgery to relieve the obstruction.
There can be numerous possible causes pertaining to virtually any body organ system, but some of the more common are neoplasia (cancer), GI parasitism, liver or kidney disease, inflammatory bowel disease, food intolerance, diabetes, hypoadrenocorticism, chronic pancreatitis, bacterial or viral infection, partial obstruction of the intestines (either from a cancer, intussusception or foreign body eg.
Another cause of diarrhea, especially in younger curious dogs is a GI foreign obstruction where something that has been ingested becomes lodged somewhere in the GI system.
Another main trigger is the involuntary movement of the hairlike cilia in the respiratory tract which remove foreign matter from the air before it gets into the lungs, but other underlying causes can include mucous irritation, obstruction of the nasal passage, inflammation, excess nasal discharge or secretion, pneumonia, chronic vomiting, GI disease, and nasal tumors and dental diseases in older dogs.
Possible upper GI series to rule in or out the involvement of foreign bodies, obstructions, tumors, organ displacement etc..
Medications can be used to manage these issues, should they arise; however, surgical correction of the respiratory obstruction generally leads to great improvement of the GI symptoms.
Interventional procedures — including cardiac pacing, balloon valvuloplasty, transcatheter PDA closure, tracheal stenting, urethral stenting for cancerous obstructions, ureteral stenting from both malignant (cancer) and benign (stones, stricture) causes, intrahepatic portosystemic shunt closure, nasopharyngeal stenting, arterial embolization or chemoembolization for bleeding or to slow tumor growth, arterial coiling of guttural pouch mycosis, foreign body retrieval from the GI tract, respiratory tract, or vasculature, etc
Systemic toxicity is not expected but can cause GI upset and pose obstruction risk.
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