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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

Easier Treatment for Aural Hematomas

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December 12, 2012 / (6) comments


"Can’t you just drain it?"

That’s the most common reaction I get from owners whenever I describe the surgery I recommend to deal with aural hematomas in dogs. I don’t blame them. The procedure sounds like a pretty grisly way to deal with what is a relatively harmless pocket of blood that has collected between the layers of tissue in a dog’s pinna (ear flap).

The problem is, if I just drain the aural hematoma, it’s almost assuredly coming back, and if we do nothing and the body successfully resorbs the blood clot, the ear may be dramatically disfigured. Plus, that heavy, blood-filled pinna has to be uncomfortable. If I had something like that hanging off of my head, I’d want my doctor to fix it ASAP.

 

 

I treat hematomas in the following manner:

 

1. Make an S-shaped incision over the swollen, blood-filled area (under anesthesia, of course).

2. Remove the clots and liquids that have accumulated there.

3. Place multiple sutures through the ear to hold the tissues together.

4. Leave the incision open so that any new bleeding that occurs can easily drain.

5. Bandage the ear to put pressure on the area and absorb any drainage that does continue.

 

An E-collar is usually necessary to keep dogs from messing with the bandage and prematurely removing sutures. The bandages can usually be taken off a couple of days after surgery and the sutures removed 10 to 14 days later as long as everything seems to have healed well.

This procedure is almost always effective at permanently tacking together the layers of tissue that make up the pinna so that in the future, blood doesn’t have any space in which to collect.

I recently read about a new method of dealing with aural hematomas that offers an interesting first-line alternative to surgical repair. A veterinarian sedated the dog, drained the hematoma, flushed out the pocket to remove any remaining debris, and then injected the area with the corticosteroid methylprednisolone acetate. If the hematoma was still present a week later, the procedure was repeated. Any hematomas that had not resolved within 15 days of presentation were treated surgically. Eighteen of the nineteen dogs included in the study responded to this less traumatic method of treatment, although six had relapses within three months.

However the hematoma is treated, its cause also must be addressed. Typically, aural hematomas form because a blood vessel has broken within the pinna as a result of vigorous head shaking or ear scratching. Ear infections, ear mite infestations, foreign bodies within the ear canal, and allergies are all common underlying causes of aural hematoma formation.

I’d be willing to try this new way of dealing with aural hematomas, but if the condition did recur, my recommendation would certainly be surgery. I’m interested in what owners think. Would you rather have a definitive surgery up front knowing it may not have been necessary, or try the less invasive method first with the knowledge that surgery may still be required in a few weeks?

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Source

Aural Hematoma in Dogs: Evaluation of a Simplified Medical Treatment Using In Situ Methylprednisolone Acetate. WCVD Capsules. Clinician’s Brief. Nov 2012.

 

 

Image: zoe1 by Doc Searls / via Flickr

 

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COMMENTS (6)
1
Not definitive enough yet
by oh holland on 12/12/2012 11:47am

I would certainly opt for the new, less invasive treatment for ear hematomas when these criteria are present: there is a database of a hundred or more cases, and the results clearly favor success without relapse.

Till then I'll stick with the tried-and-true surgical fix. I don't have time for return trips to fix a failed fix, and don't want to put my dogs through more than one procedure when I know there is a fail-safe method.

by Daniel Whitton on 12/15/2012 02:13pm

I find no mention of the ear shriveling after treatment is finished, and wonder if my treatment would be better suited.
Please ask your vet to consider the 'auralsplint' to remedy the hematoma and prohibit the ear disfigurement.
Contact Daniel at 'auralsplint.org' for more information and possible inclusion in the study.

2
Question
by TheOldBroad on 12/12/2012 07:23pm

If presented with these options, I'd have to ask what is easiest on the critter. It sounds like the new/easier method could very well require multiple procedures with 1/3 of those ultimately requiring surgery anyway.

by Daniel Whitton on 12/15/2012 02:24pm

The surgery is not 100% effective in stopping the return of the hematoma.
The sutures offer a holding of tissues together while the ear makes re-connection. However, typically the ear once opened has all the fluids and pre-connective fibers removed by cleaning the inside of the hematoma cavity before suturing it closed. I find this detrimental due to the ear now needs do replace these fibrous elements and has to avoid spilling these elements out of the surgical opening left open to drain any new fluids entering into the hematoma cavity.
With the 'auralsplint' there is no slicing open of the ear to release the clotted mass which contains healing elements, but only aspiration to remove fluids thus reducing the hematoma cavity to a size where the auralsplint can be applied to hold the ear and its tissues together allowing for natural healing of he tissues together. The 'auralsplint' also holds the ear in its natural elongated position prohibiting disfigurement once healing has set in.
The treatment conclusion is a natural ear without any scars from surgery, no need for general anesthesia and far less money expended by both the owner and the veterinarian.

3
Alternative to surgery
by Daniel Whitton on 12/15/2012 02:09pm

Hello Dr. Coates and your inquisitive hematoma afflicted animal owners.
I am in the process of instituting an alternative corrective procedure for aural hematoma in animal ears.
The treatment is the 'Auralsplint' which performs the function of holding the ear tissues together while the hematoma heals naturally.
As per the surgery with its sutures holding the skins and cartilages close together, the auralsplint keeps the ear pinna elongated during the treatment and healing allowing for the ear healed pinna to be in normal condition once treatment is finished, as opposed to the shriveled ear which occurs when only aspiration and taping of the ear is performed.
I would like the veterinarians to accept this treatment as a new staple in the arsenal we have to treat aural hematomas.
I am conducting a case by case study with the results compiled into a descriptive article to be submitted for publish in the JAVMA.
For more information or inclusion into the study, please contact Daniel at 'auralsplint.org' for a request form and/or any questions concerning the treatment.

4
Just Had This Procedure
by Cathy Brown Daniel on 05/22/2013 12:04am

My German Shepard has a hematoma which caused the tip of her ear to flop over. First estimate for full surgery was $750.00 + dollars. I found a vet nearby online who does this "new" procedure. They could do it right away, 20 minutes later, she was out with a bandaged ear and an E collar. 12 days later, bandages off, ear is perfectly upright, no shriveling. $200 total for visit/ procedure.....well worth it!

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About fully vetted

Jennifer Coates, DVM

Photo of Dr Coates

Image credit: Jim Piraino

...graduated with honors from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 1999. In the years since, she has practiced veterinary medicine in Virginia, Wyoming, and Colorado. She is the author of several books about veterinary medicine and animal care, including the Dictionary of Veterinary Terms: Vet-Speak Deciphered for the Non-Veterinarian. Dr. Coates also writes short stories that focus on the strength and importance of the human-animal bond, and freelance articles relating to a variety of animal care and veterinary topics. Dr. Coates lives in Fort Collins, Colorado with her husband, daughter, and various species of pets.

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