What is Mega Esophagus? The esophagus is the tube connecting the throat to the
stomach. When food is perceived in the esophagus, neurologic reflex causing
muscle contraction and relaxation lead to rapid transport of the food into
the stomach, like an elevator going down. Other reflexes prevent breathing
during this swallowing process to protect the lungs from aspiration.
When these reflexes are interrupted such as by disease in
the esophageal tissue or nerve disease, the esophagus loses its ability to
transport food. Instead the esophagus loses all tone and dilates. Also,
the reflex protecting the lung is disrupted and aspiration pneumonia
commonly follows.
Most cases involve young puppies (Great Danes, Irish
setters, Austrailian Cattle Dogs, Golden Retreivers and German Shepherds are genetically predisposed). In these cases the
condition is believed congenital though it often does not show up until the
pup begins to try solid food. Congenital megaesophagus is believed to occur
due to incomplete nerve development in the esophagus. The good news is that
nerve development may improve as the pet matures. Prognosis is thus better
for congenital megaesophagus than it is for megaesophagus acquired during
adulthood.
The above condition is treatable. Treatment takes
dedication, love and hard work.
The Diagnostic Plan
First, the megaesophagus must be diagnosed. This is done
radiographically. If megaesophagus is not obvious on plain films, it is
better not to use contrast (Barium) studies if possible. This is because
megaesophagus patients have the tendency to inhale or "aspirate" food
contents that back up in their throats. This is dangerous enough when the
material is simply food but if barium is present and becomes inhaled, the
body has great difficulty removing it from the lungs. Still, sometimes this
is the only way to see the megaesophagus.
Treatment
This puppy needs to be on a liquid diet consisting of
ground kibble and lots of water fed before it sets up. Feed the dog in an elevated position. Ideally, the pet should be kept in
this position for 10-15 minutes after the meal.
Vomiting versus Regurgitation
Most people do
not realize that there is a difference between these two actions. Vomiting
is an active process. There is gagging, heaving, and retching as the body
actively expels stomach contents. Regurgitation is passive. For whatever
reason, food is swallowed from the mouth but never really goes anywhere
beyond that point. Food sits in the esophagus until it simply falls back
out the mouth at some point. In the dog, megaesophagus is the most common
cause of regurgitation.
FEEDING
Feed Iams puppy
food ground up in the blender - 1/2 cup ground kibble mixed with warm water
and given immediately.
Feed frequently. Small meals (1/2 cup ground kibble with warm
water in a 1 quart food pan with at least an inch of water) fed as close as
every 3 hours . Very few dogs diagnosed with
Megaesophagus will manage well with two meals per day. 5
feedings is what a puppy should get daily and will need to be maintained this
way throughout its life.
Kibble given in plenty of water may satisfy most of the water requirement to
stay hydrated, but always have fresh water available.
Feed
as small volume as possible per meal, based on the highest
number of feedings that can be achieved for that day.
(Add: the importance of resting the digestive system).
If you
put this dog on normal full kibble feedings at anytime it will enlarge the
esophagus so much that it will fill up the lung area and the dog can
die from aspiration pneumonia.
Feeding your dog in an upright position is helpful. Dependent
upon severity of the main symptom markers (1) regurgitation, (2) ability to
gain weight, (3) ability to maintain weight, the upright position should be:
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Minimally 45 degrees. This is known as elevated feeding, whereby
your dog's head and neck are well above the stomach region.
This method may work well enough for some.
Maintain
the vertical upright feeding position after the last swallow to further
increase digestive potential.
Having your dog remain in a supine, near vertical position after the
meal (ex: 5-10min., 15-20 being better) is also very helpful. The
digestion process is far from over after that last swallow! Holding
this position longer will allow gravity to further improve the digestion
miracle you are trying to achieve.
Vertical feeding will work best for the majority!
"Vertical" indicates that the dog's spine is 90 degrees or nearly
straight up. |
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To increase calorie intake you can use the
following:
Stat
Ensure
Nutri-Cal
Vitacal
NutristatDo not give any bones or
rawhide to a dog with mega esophagus as they tend to ingest parts of these
items. This can cause severe vomiting and injury to an already
flacid esophagus.
Hotdogs & Cheese cut
into pellet sized pieces are fine training aids and can be used for an
occasional treat. Do not give too many at one time.
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