Twenty-four dogs and 19 cats that had surgical pancreatic biopsy had sufficient detail in their clinical records and fulfilled the inclusion criteria.
Postoperative complications were seen in 10 cases of which 5 were suggestive of post-surgical pancreatitis.
Two patients were euthanased within 10 days of surgery because of the underlying disease; neither suffered postoperative complications.
Pancreatic pathology was found in 19 cases, 7 cases showed no change other than benign pancreatic nodular hyperplasia, and no abnormalities were seen in 18 cases.
Complications may be encountered following surgical pancreatic biopsy, although the risk should be minimal with good surgical technique.
Pancreatic biopsy may provide a useful contribution to case management but it is not clear whether a negative pancreatic biopsy should be used to rule out pancreatic disease.
Dogs were more likely to have no significant pathology found on pancreatic biopsy than cats, where chronic pancreatitis was the most common finding.
Source: Pratschke, K. M., Ryan, J., McAlinden, A. and McLauchlan, G. (2014), Pancreatic surgical biopsy in 24 dogs and 19 cats: postoperative complications and clinical relevance of histological findings. Journal of Small Animal Practice. doi: 10.1111/jsap.12262
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