Case report: Chylopericardium secondary to dialysis catheter related jugular venous thrombosis in two dogs receiving long-term hemodialysis
Dennis J. Woerde, Carrie A. Palm, Laetitia M. Duler, Larry D. Cowgill, Marisa K. Ames, William T. N. Culp

TL;DR
This case report describes two dogs that developed a rare condition called chylopericardium due to dialysis catheter-related issues.
Contribution
The report highlights a rare complication of long-term dialysis catheters in dogs and their clinical management.
Findings
Chylopericardium occurred in two dogs undergoing chronic hemodialysis.
Catheter-associated thrombosis and stenosis were suspected causes despite anticoagulant use.
Subtotal pericardiectomy and catheter interventions were attempted but had limited success.
Abstract
Chylopericardium is a rare entity in veterinary medicine. In this report we document the development of chylopericardium in two dogs undergoing chronic hemodialysis. An 11-year-old female spayed Labrador retriever (Case 1) presented with acute coughing and lethargy 2 months following initial dialysis catheter placement and initiation of dialysis therapy for severe azotemia. Echocardiography demonstrated severe pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade. Pericardial fluid analysis was consistent with chylous effusion. The dog underwent a subtotal pericardiectomy with thoracic duct ligation, and a PleuralPort™ was placed. The patient continued to receive outpatient hemodialysis therapy after pericardiectomy for several months until she died acutely at home. A 4-year-old male neutered Doberman (Case 2) was being treated for 2 months with outpatient hemodialysis for management of chronic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiovascular Conditions and Treatments · Lymphatic Disorders and Treatments · Pericarditis and Cardiac Tamponade
