The most common surgical approach is bilateral
anal sacculectomy with fistulectomies.
Brachycephalic Upper Airway Syndrome (BUAS) including soft palate resection,
laryngeal sacculectomy, stenotic nares repair
We routinely perform surgical procedures such as elective spay and neuter, and general soft tissue procedures such as cystotomy, splenectomy and mass removals as well as emergency surgery and more advanced procedures such as
anal sacculectomy, cruciate repair and perineal urethrostomy to name a few.
In the most severe cases where this continues to be a problem, the vet may need to perform a surgical procedure called
a sacculectomy.
Removal of the anal sacs (called
a sacculectomy) is a specialized surgery.
In a procedure referred to as anal
sacculectomy, a dog's anal glands are permanently removed.
In addition to general veterinary medicine, Dr. van Beuren has surgical training in a variety of specialty areas including vasectomies, tubal litigations, gonadal implants, mastectomies, splenectomies, gastrointestinal surgery, bladder stone removal, and anal
sacculectomy.
At this point, my Vet felt a Bilateral Anal
Sacculectomy was necessary to avoid the glands becoming abscessed.
If the anal sacs are associated with the fistulas, an anal
sacculectomy may be performed to remove the anal sacs.
Procedures for the canine labs include laryngeal tie - back, TECA - LBO, forelimb amputation, perineal hernia repair, salivary gland resection, scrotal urethrostomy, chest drain placement, anal
sacculectomy, gastropexy and rapid splenectomy.
The occasional blockage is not serious, however, repeated or severe anal gland blockages warrant surgical intervention called an «anal
sacculectomy.»
Phrases with «sacculectomy»