SAEVA Proceedings 2018 4. Proceedings | Page 38

SAEVA Congress 2018 Proceedings | 12-15 February 2018 | ATKV Goudini Spa “Lung rockets” in EIPH However, these subtle abnormalities of the visceral pleural surface are nonspecific and may be detected in horses with IAD, RAO, EMPF, early pneumonia, pulmonary edema, or in horses with scarring from previous pneumonia or pleuritis. Larger hypoechoic areas of fluid-filled pulmonary parenchyma can also be imaged in horses with more severe EIPH. Local pleural thickening or adhesions are rare sonographic findings in horses with EIPH. Equine influenza Comet-tail artifacts radiating from small nonaerated areas, created by small accumulations of inflammatory cells, are imaged in horses with equine influenza. Mild lung consolidation (<1 to 6 cm) and peripheral pulmonary irregularities (comet tail artifacts) were imaged in 69% of horses with clinical signs of acute infectious upper respiratory disease (AIURD) caused by equine influenza virus and the changes seen were more severe than in the horses in the same stable without clinical signs. All horses experimentally infected with aerosolized influenza A/equine/Kentucky/91 (H3V8) developed pneumonia that was detected ultrasonographically as consolidation and edema by one week post exposure and that was resolving by the end of week 2. Gastrointestinal Ultrasonography Right dorsal colitis Right dorsal colitis associated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug toxicity can be diagnosed ultrasonographically by detecting a thickened right dorsal colon ventral to the liver in the right 10 th – 14 th intercostal spaces. The right dorsal colon can consistently be imaged in the right 11 th and 12 th intercostal spaces in all horses with right dorsal colitis and in the 13 th intercostal space in most affected horses. The wall of the affected right dorsal colon is usually 2-3 times normal thickness and is significantly greater than the thickness of the right ventral colon measured in the 12 th intercostal space. An abnormal pattern of echogenicity of the right dorsal colon is also detected sonographically in horses with right dorsal colitis. In affected horses, a hypoechoic layer was detected in the thickened right dorsal colon, surrounded on each side by a hyperechoic mucosal and serosal surface. 33