Therapeutic Management of Acute Pancreatitis in Three Dogs

Authors

  • Atmakur Venkatesh Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, India
  • Devaraju Sumathi Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, India
  • Kaliyannan Mohanambal Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, India
  • Umesh Gupta Kavithakumari, Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, India
  • Ramasamy Ravi Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, India
  • Kallipatti Karupusamy Ponnu Swamy Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/ijvsbt.21.3.26

Keywords:

degradation, adjacent

Abstract

The pancreas is a tubuloalveolar gland (Watson, 2015)  

situated in the right cranial quadrant caudal to the  stomach, composed of a left limb or lobe, which lies behind  the greater curvature of the stomach and adjacent to the  cranial aspect of the transverse colon; a right limb or lobe  which lies just medial to the proximal duodenum and a body  between these two limbs. It is composed of two types of  cells responsible for endocrine and exocrine functions. The  major function of the exocrine pancreas is the production,  storage, and secretion of digestive enzymes important for the  degradation of ingested proteins, fats, and polysaccharides  which are subsequently released into the stomach and/or  small intestine as food reaches these organs. The digestive  enzymes produced by the pancreatic acinar cells are stored  until the pancreas is stimulated to secrete them into the  duodenum. Acute pancreatitis typically presents as a  sudden, sterile inflammation marked by necrosis and edema.  This condition does not cause permanent damage to the  pancreatic structure and is entirely reversible. It is believed  that acute pancreatitis arises mainly due to the improper  activation of zymogens within the pancreas, leading to  autodigestion, inflammation, and tissue necrosis. This  document reports successful therapeutic management of  acute pancreatitis in three dogs.

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References

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Published

2025-05-07

How to Cite

Venkatesh, A., Sumathi, D., Mohanambal, K., Kavithakumari, U.G., Ravi, R., & Swamy , K.K.P. (2025). Therapeutic Management of Acute Pancreatitis in Three Dogs . Indian Journal of Veterinary Sciences and Biotechnology, 21(3), 129–131. https://doi.org/10.48165/ijvsbt.21.3.26