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Thread: Questions for dog owners considering adrenalectomy

  1. #1
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    Default Questions for dog owners considering adrenalectomy

    This was put together by one of our members Trish whose dog Flynn under went an adrenalectomy for a pheo successfully.

    Part I is for owners in the initial stages, when an adrenal tumour has been identified and they are considering if surgery is even an option for their dog.

    Part II is for when surgery has been decided upon and what questions might help when they are discussing it with their surgeon.


    Part I - Questions to ask when considering if surgery is an option for your dog’s adrenal tumour:
    1. What type of tumour do you suspect, ?functional, ?non-functional, pheochromocytoma, benign, metastatic
    2. Expected life span for my dog in a normal situation. If your dog is close to, at or past his expected lifespan for his breed is surgery going to be of any benefit?
    3. Prognosis for my dog if we treated medically i.e. with Cushings medications. AND if we do not proceed with surgery how long do you think it would be before the tumour started adversely affecting his quality of life?
    4. If he is miserable now, does the benefit of potentially risky surgery outweigh his current quality of life?
    5. Are there any other health problems that could impact on a positive surgical outcome, for example: if your dog is overweight or has heart, BP, liver, kidney or lung conditions
    6. Is there any sign of tumour spread – imaging should be done, including ultrasound and on advice of specialists either CT or MRI to check whether there is local invasion around the tumour, into blood vessels including vena cava or spread further away in the body to lungs etc
    7. Surgeon recommendations – would he/she do it for their own dog?
    8. Psychological impact for the owner: It is important to understand this is risky surgery, sadly current guidelines indicate 1:5 dogs do not make it, and some recommendations are not even that high. Can you accept it if your dogs dies during or in the postoperative recovery period surgery? This is where it is important to weigh up whether the benefit of your dog being fully cured is worth the risk of possibly losing him.
    9. Financially – can you afford it? Find out estimate of costs.
    10. Hopefully this will not happen, but if your dog collapses, e.g his heart stops either during his surgery or afterwards what emergency measures should be undertaken, do you want your dog to have CPR, how far are you (the owner) willing to go for your dog to be saved in such circumstances

    Part II - Surgery has been recommended as treatment for your dogs adrenal tumour, here are a few suggestions on what questions you should ask your surgeon:
    1. Are you board certified? How many operations of this type have you done? What complications have you experienced? What were the outcomes?
    2. Please explain to me how you will do the surgery, which part would likely give you the most trouble? Will you be doing the actual surgery or a resident in a teaching situation? If so, is their close supervision?
    3. Will there be a specialist anaesthetist available for the surgery?
    4. If it hasn’t been done, do we need a CT/MRI scan to look at the tumour more closely to check for vena cava involvement or any other tumour spread?
    5. What are the risks associated with this surgery, including
    • Bleeding (including trauma to blood vessels or other organs during surgery)
    • clots
    • Blood pressure or heart problems such as arrhythmias
    • pancreatitis
    • pneumonia
    • kidney failure
    • infection
    • wound problems
    • bowel problems
    • anaesthetic risks
    • adrenal insufficiency or electrolyte abnormalities
    • death (sorry but you have to ask that risk too)
    6. If we proceed with surgery does my dog need preoperative treatment with Cushing’s meds, antihypertensive if high blood pressure is a problem – phenoxybenzamine recommended preoperatively for dogs with pheochromocytoma, anticoagulants or anything else?
    7. How will you treat to prevent clots postoperatively?
    8. What would you do if you found anything else during the surgery i.e. nodules in other organs e.g. spleen, opposite adrenal, liver, kidney. Would you remove them and what are the risks associated when doing additional abdominal surgery together with adrenalectomy
    9. How long will it take and when will you contact me so I know all is OK, when can I visit after surgery?
    10. How will the postoperative period go, how long would you anticipate he would need to stay in hospital? How will we manage pain?
    11. What monitoring would be needed, e.g. heart monitoring, oxygen levels in the postoperative period
    12. If your dog has an adrenocortical tumour affecting cortisol production will he need to be on steroids following surgery and for how long?
    13. If there are problems when I take him home, who do I contact? Hopefully the surgical team until all is stable.
    Sharlene and the late great diva - Molly muffin (always missed and never forgotten)

  2. #2
    mytil's Avatar
    mytil is offline Administrator and always In Loving Memory
    Join Date
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    Default Re: Questions for dog owners considering adrenalectomy

    Laparoscopic vs. open adrenalectomy: perioperative data and survival analysis in 70 dogs with an adrenal tumor
    (15 August 2023)

    https://www.frontiersin.org/journals...3.1156801/full

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