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Chapter 10


                 Small Exotic Animal



                 Endosurgery




                 Romain Pizzi







                 Introduction


                                  Rigid endoscopy has been well established in avian medicine since the
                                  1970s when it was first used for surgical sexing. It is only more recently
                                  that endoscopy has become increasingly utilised in general exotic animal
                                  practice  in  reptiles  and  small  pet  mammals.  While  some  endosurgical
                                  procedures are well described in the laboratory animal literature, these
                                  are often more of use as models for human diseases, than in the types
                                  of condition encountered in small pet mammals. The author has yet to
                                  see a clinical indication for a Nissen fundoplication in a pet rabbit. Much
                                  emphasis is placed on the minimally invasive nature of endosurgery, but
                                  the enhanced visualisation, the access to parts of the body and structures
                                  difficult to visualise in open surgery, and provision of excellent illumina-
                                  tion are also of great benefit to the surgeon working with small exotic
                                  species.
                                    In  these  patients  it  is  possible  to  perform  not  only  techniques  and
                                  applications identical to those used in canines and felines, but also other
                                  specific procedures, thanks to differing anatomy and the unique disease
                                  conditions encountered. Diagnostic endosurgery is particularly useful in
                                  species  where  other  imaging  modalities  are  limited  due  to  the  species
                                  anatomy.  Ultrasonographic  examination  of  the  rabbit,  guinea  pig  and
                                  chinchilla  abdomen,  for  instance,  is  limited  by  the  voluminous  gas-
                                  containing caecum, while in birds the air sacs prove a similar limitation.
                                  Radiography may similarly not demonstrate small liver metastasis from
                                  a  primary  uterine  adenocarcinoma  in  a  rabbit,  or  small  Aspergillus
                                  fungal air-sac plaques in a parrot; and the osteoderms in the scales of a



                 Clinical Manual of Small Animal Endosurgery, First Edition. Edited by Alasdair Hotston Moore and
                 Rosa Angela Ragni.
                 © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Published 2012 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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