Head And Neck Surgery Flashcards

1
Q

In what breeds do you more commonly see lip fold pyoderma in?

A

Pendulous lipped breeds

- spaniels, retrievers, setters

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2
Q

Why are lip fold pyoderma usually located on the lower lip?

A

Have a lower lip frenulum (skin fold) that traps moisture and allows dermatitis to develop

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3
Q

What is the treatment for lip fold pyoderma?

A

Conservative management

Surgical resection

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4
Q

What is a labial avulsion?

A

Shearing trauma (usually to lower lip) along the mucogivival line that leaves very little soft tissue for reattachment

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5
Q

Treatment for labial avulsion?

A

Suture reconstruction is usually effective for maxillary lesions

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6
Q

Lower lip with suture reconstruction often fails because of..

A

— limited soft tissue to suture on gingival side
—edema and swelling of lip increases weight
— suture subjected to movement, etc, when eating and drinking

** esp with bilateral injury**

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7
Q

How will you reconstruct a bilateral labial avulsion on the lower jaw?

A

Place interdental stent sutures to support the weight of lip

Suture mucogingival junction at interdental papillae between teeth

If involving the body of mandible.. may need suture through the mandible but avoid tooth roots

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8
Q

What must you take into consideration before doing a lip reconstruction?

A

Species/breed differences

Location and size — proximity to mucocuteanous junction

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9
Q

How will you suture a lip reconstruction to avoid step deformity?

A

Start suturing at the lip margin with a figure of eight pattern— apposes margins and avoids mucosal inversion

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10
Q

What are options for reconstruction of the lip?

A

Direct apposition
Labial advancement flap
Labial rotation flap

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11
Q

What is the most common disorder of the salivary gland? Is it a surgical disorder

A

Mucocele

YES it is surgical — removal is the only definitive treatment for mucoceles

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12
Q

There are several causes of salivary gland enlargement.. which of the following conditions will NOT benifit from surgical removal?

Sialadenitis
Sialadenosis
Necrotizing sialometaplasia

A

Sialadenosis —> signs often persists because it is a neurological disorder, responds to phenobarbital therapy

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13
Q

How can you tell sialadenosis from necrotizing sialometaplasia?

A

Both have similar signs.. retching, gulping, lip smacking, hypersalivation, and poor appetite

Necrotizing sialometaplasia is a painful enlargement

Both disorders can benefit from phenobarbital therapy but necrotizing may need gland excision

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14
Q

Your patient has siladentitis.. clinical signs include fever, depression, and painful swollen salivary glands

What are possible therapies?

A

Abcessaiton can cause acute and severe pain

Drainage
Removal of gland

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15
Q

What are the 4 major salivary glands in the dog? What additional one is in cat?

A

Parotid

Mandibular

Sublingual

Zygomatic

Cat also has a molar salivary glland

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16
Q

On physical exam, you find a nonpainful fluctuant swelling of the sublingual gland. What do you suspect this is?

A

Mucocele

17
Q

On physical exam you find a swelling and enlarged sublingual gland. What do you suspect this is?

A

Primary gland disorder

18
Q

On physical exam you find a swelling and enlarged sublingual gland. How will you diagnose this lesion?

A

Decompress mucocele?

Confirm substance is saliva
Cytology to rule out infection/neoplasia

Culture and sensitivity if infection is present

19
Q

What is a salivary mucocele?

A

Accumulation of saliva within a nonepitheial, nonsecretory lining

20
Q

What are the most common locations of a salivary mucocele??

A

Cervical mucocele (most common)

Ranula => sublingual (submucosal) swelling

Pharyngeal == can cause respiratory distress and dysphagia (less common presentation but imp DDX for patients with pharyngeal mass)

21
Q

What are clinical signs of a zygomatic salivary gland mucocele?

What other ddx would you have for these clinical signs?

A

Consistent with retrobulbuar disease — exopthalamus, protrusion of 3rd eyelid, subconjunctival saliva

Retrobulbar cellulitis/ abscess but usually not painful

22
Q

What are possible treatments for salivary mucocele and what is the only definitive treatment?

A

Surgical removal of gland (definative, except for parotid)

Percutaneous aspiration of accumulated saliava in combo with above

Marsupialization of ranula (salvage procedure)

Lancing pharyngeal mucocele
Prior to definitive surgery to relieve respiratory distress

23
Q

T/F: sublingual and mandibular salivary glands are always removed together

A

True

The gland and ducts are too close together to only remove one of them

24
Q

What is the definitive surgical treatment for cervical mucocele, ranula, or pharyngeal mucocele of sublingual gland?

A

Sublingual salivary gland adenectomy

25
Q

What is the traditional approach to excision of the salivary and mandibular salivary glands?

A

Incision under ramus of mandible and then extending back over the sublingual gland, between the jugular and the linguofacial veins

26
Q

What is the alternative approach to excision of the sublingual and mandibular salivary glands?

A

Ventral under the chin along the inner mandible, across the diagastricus muscle and and casually across the gland

27
Q

You had a salivary mucocele with a cervical presentation. You removed the sublingual and mandibular glands… do you now also remove the mucocele?

A

No

— can drain contents but will resolve once the affected gland is removed

28
Q

What is the prognosis for a salivary mucocele?

A

Excellent

Recurrence is less than 5%

29
Q

Why can you have recurrence of salivary mucocele?

A

Inadequate excision

Operation on wrong side :O

Removed wrong structure :O

30
Q

What are the treatment options for a parotid sialocele/fistula

A

Ligation of parotid duct proximal to defect —> atrophy of the gland

Excision of gland if duct injury cannot be isolated or involves gland directly — technically challenging