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Volume 8, Issue 4 (Suppl)

J Vet Sci Technol, an open access journal

ISSN: 2157-7579

Veterinary 2017

September 04-05, 2017

September 04-05, 2017 | Paris, France

7

th

International Veterinary Congress

Sonographic determination of liver size and correlations with body surface area in hepatitis-afflicted

dogs

Shehla Gul Bokhari, Imran Hussain, Sadaf Aslam, Muhammad Awais, Abid Hayat, Saima Masood

and

Raheela Akhtar

University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Pakistan

I

n Pakistan, sonographic findings regarding liver problems in pets have not yet been reported. This study characterized

the various stages of liver disease for precise prognosis and treatment prospects in dogs in Lahore city. Liver size was

sonographically ascertained and correlated with laboratory findings in 21 client-owned dogs divided into three groups (A, B,

C), n=7. Group A comprised of healthy dogs which served as control. Group B comprised of dogs scanned for acute hepatitis,

while Group C comprised of dogs suffering from chronic hepatitis. Based on presenting clinical findings, liver was scanned

in B-mode using 5.0 MHz transducer. Hematology and biochemistry profile were assessed and body surface area calculated.

Hypoproteinemia and bleeding diathesis supervened in hepatitis-afflicted dogs (Groups B and C), manifested by a significant

decrease in albumin and platelet counts (P<0.00), and prolonged prothrombin time (PT) and APTT (P<0.00). ALT showed a

significant increase (P<0.028) while increase in bilirubin was highly significant (P<0.00) for both Groups B and C. Correlation

analysis between sonographically determined liver size and body surface area (BSA) revealed a strong correlation (0.9)

between liver size and BSA in the acute hepatitis group, moderate (0.6) correlation in the Control Group; while, the Chronic

Hepatitis Group C depicted a negative correlation (-0.5). Conclusively, sonographic liver size correlated well with BSA and with

laboratory findings and the clinical picture. Conclusively, sonographic findings correlate well with clinical picture in acute and

chronic hepatitis in dogs.

Biography

Shehla Gul Bokhari is a PhD in Veterinary Small Animal Surgery. She additionally has expertise in small animal ultrasonography. She is the first one to launch

equine tendon sonography in Pakistan. She holds 13 years of teaching, clinical and research experience. Currently, she works as Assistant Professor, at the Pet

Hospital of University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Lahore, Pakistan.

shehla.gul@uvas.edu.pk

Shehla Gul Bokhari et al., J Vet Sci Technol 2017, 8:4(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7579-C1-024