THE PET HEALTH LIBRARY
By Wendy C. Brooks, DVM, DipABVP
Educational Director,
VeterinaryPartner.com
Tracheal
Collapse
hat Is the
Trachea Anyway?
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Trachea is the
scientific name for windpipe, the tube that connects the nose, mouth, and throat
to the lungs. The trachea is meant to be a fairly rigid tube. It consists of
muscle connecting a group of cartilage rings. The rings are actually not
complete circles; they form a C with the open end of the C facing towards the
animal's back. This muscle covering the open end of the C is called the tracheal
membrane.
When the diaphragm (the flat muscle separating the abdomen from
the chest cavity) flattens and the intercostal muscles
(the muscles between the ribs) move, air is sucked into the lung. The muscles
move the opposite direction and air is pushed out of the lung. The trachea
serves as a pipeline bringing air into the chest. Part of the trachea is in the
throat but it extends into the chest as well so that we can look at the trachea
as having an intrathoracic portion and an extrathoracic portion.
Why
Would a Trachea Collapse?
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Tracheas collapse
because the C cartilage flattens due to weak cartilage. When
the C loses its curvature, the tracheal across the gets loose and floppy.
Instead of being a tight muscle covering, the membrane moves as air passes
through the trachea. When air rushes into the chest, the membrane of the intrathoracic trachea balloons outward and when air rushes
out, the membrane of the intrathoracic trachea droops
down into the C cartilage causing an occlusion. The tickling sensation of the
membrane touching the tracheal lining generates coughing and if the obstruction
interrupts breathing, the patient may become distressed. If the collapse is in
the extrathoracic (also called the cervical) trachea,
the opposite occurs; the collapse occurs during inhalation and the ballooning
during exhalation.
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Panting or rapid
breathing for any reason makes the collapse and anxiety worse, which
unfortunately tends to generate more rapid breathing and a vicious cycle of
distress.
Making things worse
still is the inflammation generated in the trachea. The collapse creates
increased secretion and inflammation thus promoting yet more coughing which
creates yet more inflammation. Ultimately the tissue of the trachea changes and
loses its normal characteristics and the condition gets worse and
worse.
The trachea may be collapsed along its entire length, only in the
intrathoracic section, or only in the extrathoracic section. Most commonly the collapse is at its
worse right where the trachea enters the chest.
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What
Animals Are Affected?
The victim is almost always a toy
breed dog, especially poodles,
Many dogs with collapsed tracheas do not
ever show symptoms, however, until a second problem complicates things. Factors
that bring out symptoms might include:
If a secondary factor such as one
of those listed above should occur and make a previously incidental collapsed
trachea a problem, often removal of the secondary factor (weight loss program,
getting an air filter, etc.) may clear up the symptoms of the collapsed
trachea.
Treatment
The following steps are often
helpful in long-term management of the tracheal collapse
patient:
In a recent retrospective study of
100 dogs with collapsing trachea, 71% responded to medication and management of
secondary factors (obesity, irritants in the air, etc.), 7% had disease so
severe that they died within one month of diagnosis, 6% had severe additional
disease problems, and the other 16% were felt to be candidates for surgical
treatment.
Emergency
The patient's distress
can reach a level so severe that the normally pink mucous membranes become
bluish and collapse can result. When this occurs, tranquilization is helpful to
relieve the anxiety that perpetuates the heavy breathing and coughing. Oxygen
therapy and cough suppressants also help. If the patient reaches the point where
distress seems extreme or if collapse results, treat this
an emergency and rush the pet to emergency veterinary
care.
Surgery?
If medical management
does not produce satisfactory results, it is possible that surgery may be of
benefit. Basically, a rigid prosthesis is placed and bonded around the trachea
effectively creating a non-collapsible tube. This is largely effective as long
as the portion of trachea that is collapsed is external to the chest.
Should the intrathoracic trachea be involved, the
surgery becomes far less successful, more expensive, and the prosthesis must be
ordered according to the specific patient’s measurements.
In all surgery cases,
the younger the patient, the more successful the surgery is likely to be with
success dropping off in patients over age 6 years. Severity of the collapse
prior to surgery is not a tremendous factor in obtaining a successful outcome;
improvement is reported in 75% to 85% of patients.
A new technique is being
explored using a self-expanding stainless steel
prosthesis. A study reporting results of 24 dogs receiving this treatment
was published in January 2004. Of these dogs, 96% showed improvement after
surgery. Two dogs died within the first week due to stent placement complications. One dog experienced
some bleeding. After this 30% were reported to be completely free of
symptoms, 61% showed marked improvement, and 4% continued to have symptoms. This
appears to be a promising technique but has still only been used in a small
number of patients.
Surgical therapy of
tracheal collapse requires a surgery specialist. If one is not on staff or
cannot be scheduled, referral can be arranged.
Date Published: 9/1/2003
12:53:00 PM
Date Revised: 06/09/2004