
Get access to all handy features included in the IVIS website
- Get unlimited access to books, proceedings and journals.
- Get access to a global catalogue of meetings, on-site and online courses, webinars and educational videos.
- Bookmark your favorite articles in My Library for future reading.
- Save future meetings and courses in My Calendar and My e-Learning.
- Ask authors questions and read what others have to say.
Syndromes digestifs dans l’espèce féline
Get access to all handy features included in the IVIS website
- Get unlimited access to books, proceedings and journals.
- Get access to a global catalogue of meetings, on-site and online courses, webinars and educational videos.
- Bookmark your favorite articles in My Library for future reading.
- Save future meetings and courses in My Calendar and My e-Learning.
- Ask authors questions and read what others have to say.
Read
> Syndrome dysphagique
La dysphagie est un trouble de la déglutition. Elle peut être la conséquence d’une obstruction, d’une affection oropharyngée ou œsophagienne douloureuse ou encore de troubles de la motricité (Washa- bau, 2005). Elle se traduit notamment par l’apparition de régurgitations.
Les régurgitations se définissent comme une expulsion passive de salive ou d’aliments non digérés. Elles surviennent souvent très peu de temps après l’ingestion des aliments. Mais lorsque leur contenu est salivaire, elles peuvent se produire plus tardivement. Contrairement aux vomissements, les régurgitations se produisent brutalement, sans prodromes ni contractions abdominales (Guilfort et Strombeck, 1996b).
Lors d’atteinte œsophagienne, d’autres signes cliniques sont observés :
- ptyalisme
- halitose
- dysorexie ou anorexie
- odynophagie (déglutition douloureuse)
- polypnée
- toux et/ou jetage lors de surinfection pulmonaire. […]
Get access to all handy features included in the IVIS website
- Get unlimited access to books, proceedings and journals.
- Get access to a global catalogue of meetings, on-site and online courses, webinars and educational videos.
- Bookmark your favorite articles in My Library for future reading.
- Save future meetings and courses in My Calendar and My e-Learning.
- Ask authors questions and read what others have to say.
About
How to reference this publication (Harvard system)?
Affiliation of the authors at the time of publication
1Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Berlin University, Berlin, Germany. 2AFVAC, Paris, France.
Comments (0)
Ask the author
0 comments