Computed tomographic findings in dogs with hepatic bacterial parenchymal infection and abscessation

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Bacterial liver parenchymal infections in dogs are rarely documented, and their imaging characteristics are scarce in the veterinary literature, especially in Computed Tomography (CT). This retrospective multicentric study aimed to describe the CT characteristics of parenchymal bacterial liver infection and abscessation in dogs and compare them with the human literature. Twenty dogs met the inclusion criteria. All dogs, except one, showed discrete hepatic lesions consistent with pyogenic liver abscess (19/20). A single case showed diffuse liver changes, which was diagnosed with granulomatous bacterial hepatitis (1/20). Multifocal lesions were associated with the presence of abdominal pain (p = 0.023). CT characteristics of pyogenic liver abscesses in our study resemble those described in the human literature, with multifocal (14/19) or single (5/19), round or ovoid (19/19), hypoattenuating hepatic lesions, which are better visualised in post-contrast images. Pyogenic liver abscesses can also show features such as the “cluster sign” (8/19), transient arterial segmental enhancement (6/10), rim enhancement (6/19), and intralesional gas (4/19). Additional CT findings, such as local lymphadenomegaly (18/20), peritoneal fat stranding (14/20), and peritoneal fluid (13/20), are also commonly observed.

Description

Bibliographic citation

Maté de Haro, L., Vila, A., Di Bella, A., Mallol, C., Anselmi, C., Barreiro-Vazquez, J.-D., Pollard, D., Salgüero, R., Fitzgerald, E., & Moreno-Aguado, B. (2024). Computed Tomographic Findings in Dogs with Hepatic Bacterial Parenchymal Infection and Abscessation. Animals (Basel), 14(23), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14233399

Relation

Has part

Has version

Is based on

Is part of

Is referenced by

Is version of

Requires

Sponsors

This research was funded by Independent Vet Care (IVC). 9077_7504-02 LM HEPATIC BACTERIAL PARENCHYMAL

Rights

© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license
Attribution 4.0 International