Page 290 - Clinical Manual of Small Animal Endosurgery
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278   Clinical Manual of Small Animal Endosurgery

                                If using an open-access approach to placement of the primary optical
                              trocar in small mammals, a flexible, low-profile ring retractor such as
                              the Lonestar retractor (ARK Surgical UK) can be extremely useful, espe-
                              cially in obese rabbits. It can also aid laparoscopy-assisted procedures,
                              such  as  laparoscopy-assisted  gastrotomy  for  foreign  bodies  in  ferrets
                              or  iguanas,  or  laparoscopy-assisted  cystotomy  for  urolithiasis  in  male
                              rabbits, by replacing the need for stay sutures, with the time-saving use
                              of fine blunt-ended elastic stays. This reduces the risk of any abdominal
                              or coelomic contamination from an opened viscus.



             Birds

                              Avian endoscopy and coelioscopy has been performed since the 1970s,
                              originally for sexing in species without obvious sexual dimorphism (Bush
                              et al., 1978; Harrison, 1978). Avian endoscopy is arguably the most well
                              established  of  all  endoscopy  techniques  in  exotic  pet  animals.  This  is
                              perhaps not necessarily due to its ease, as these are small patients, with
                              a limited operating space, and until fairly recently there was a limited
                              range of suitable small instruments for multiple puncture techniques. In
                              fact, it is almost certainly due to the fact that the alternative, open coe-
                              lomic surgery, is a much poorer option, with a notably higher morbidity
                              and mortality, as well as severe limitations in access and visualisation.
                                Careful handling of the endoscope and support of the camera, light
                              cable and endoscope eyepiece region are needed to prevent inadvertent
                              injury to delicate avian structures during endoscopy (Divers, 2011). It is
                              highly  recommended  that  practitioners  practice  on  avian  cadavers  of
                              different species, to familiarise themselves with normal avian anatomy,
                              species differences and their appearance during endoscopy.
                                The  so-called  universal  2.7 mm-diameter,  30°  viewing  angle,  18 cm
                              endoscope and associated operating sheath truly justifies its name in pet
                              avian endoscopy, and is well suited to psittacines and raptors that make
                              up a majority of avian pet patients. In larger avian patients such as large
                              raptors, a 4 mm endoscope is advantageous, being less fragile and yield-
                              ing  enhanced  visualisation  and  illumination.  A  1.9 mm  endoscope  is
                              useful for tracheoscopy, and can be used in small patients, but is fragile
                              and easily damaged. A 30° endoscope is extremely useful, if not essential,
                              for maximising visualisation in the small coelomic space of most birds.
                                Avian patients share the fortunate factor for the endoscopist of having
                              their viscera suspended within the air sacs of the coelom, making insuf-
                              flation unnecessary. Carbon dioxide insufflation would actually kill the
                              patient through asphyxia. Anaesthesia requirements are the same for any
                              surgical intervention, and while anaesthetic gases escape from any coe-
                              lomic wounds, this is negligible in coelomic endoscopy and can generally
                              be ignored. While brief procedures (less than 20 min total anaesthesia)
                              are possible under maintenance with a face mask, it is advisable, and
                              certainly  necessary  in  longer  procedures,  to  maintain  anaesthesia  via
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