P. L. C. Tisdall
University of Sydney
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Featured researches published by P. L. C. Tisdall.
Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery | 2002
Julius M. Liptak; Geraldine B. Hunt; Vanessa R. Barrs; S. F. Foster; P. L. C. Tisdall; Carolyn R. O'Brien; Richard Malik
Gastroduodenal ulceration (GU) and blood loss was diagnosed in eight cats and compared with 25 previously reported cases of feline GU. Cats with GU presented in a critical condition. Clinical signs consistent with gastrointestinal bleeding were infrequently identified although anaemia was a common finding. Non-neoplastic causes of feline GU tended to have a shorter clinical course with ulcers confined to the stomach. Conversely, cats with tumour-associated GU usually had a more protracted clinical course, weight loss, and ulcers located in the stomach for gastric tumours and the duodenum for extra-intestinal tumours. In this series, definitive diagnosis was possible for cats with neoplasia (gastric tumours and gastrinoma), however, it was difficult to precisely identify the underlying aetiology in cats with non-neoplastic GU. Prompt stabilisation with a compatible blood transfusion, surgical debridement or resection, antibiotic and antiulcer therapy, and treatment of the underlying disease, if identified, was successful in the majority of cases. The prognosis for cats with appropriately managed GU depended on the underlying aetiology, but even cats with neoplasia could be successfully palliated for prolonged periods.
Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery | 1999
Vanessa R. Barrs; Julia A. Beatty; P. L. C. Tisdall; Geraldine B. Hunt; Marcus Gunew; R. G. Nicoll; Richard Malik
Between 1997 and 1999, five domestic crossbred cats (four long haired, one short haired) presented with a palpable abdominal mass and were shown to have small intestinal trichobezoars at laparotomy or necropsy. Hair balls were associated with partial or complete intestinal obstruction and were situated in the proximal jejunum to distal ileum. In four cats obstructions were simple, while the remaining cat had a strangulating obstruction. Three of the cats were 10 years or older, and two were less than 4 years. In the three older cats abdominal neoplasia was suspected and investigations were delayed or declined in two of these cats because of a perceived poor prognosis. Predisposing factors identified in this series of cats included a long-hair coat, flea allergy dermatitis, inflammatory bowel disease and ingestion of non-digestible plant material. This report shows that the ingestion of hair is not always innocuous and that intestinal trichobezoars should be considered in the differential diagnoses of intestinal obstruction and intra-abdominal mass lesions, particularly in long-haired cats.
Journal of Small Animal Practice | 2014
Colleen O'Leary; A. Parslow; Richard Malik; Geraldine B. Hunt; R. I. Hurford; P. L. C. Tisdall; David L. Duffy
OBJECTIVES To determine the heritability of extra-hepatic portosystemic shunts and elevated post-prandial serum bile acid concentrations in Maltese dogs. MATERIALS AND METHODS Maltese dogs were recruited and investigated by a variable combination of procedures including dynamic bile acid testing, rectal ammonia tolerance testing, ultrasonography, portal venography, surgical inspection or necropsy. In addition, nine test matings were carried out between affected and affected dogs, and affected and unaffected dogs. RESULTS In 135 variably related Maltese, shunt status could be confirmed in 113, including 19 with an extra-hepatic portosystemic shunt (17 confirmed at surgery, 2 at necropsy). Rectal ammonia tolerance testing results and post-prandial serum bile acid concentrations were retrievable for 50 and 88 dogs, respectively. Pedigree information was available for these 135 and an additional 164 related dogs. Two consecutive test matings were carried out between two affected animals (whose shunts had been attenuated), with 2 of 8 (25%) of offspring having an extra-hepatic portosystemic shunt. Six test matings were carried out between an affected and an unaffected animal, with 2 of 22 (9%) offspring affected. Heritability of extra-hepatic portosystemic shunt was 0·61 calculated using variance components analysis [95% confidence interval (CI) 0·14 to 1·0, P=0·001]. The best fitting model from segregation analysis was a common, partially penetrant, recessive model (allele frequency 0·34, penetrance 0·99, CI 0·09 to 1·0). The heritability of elevated post-prandial serum bile acid (and thus likely portal vein hypoplasia) was 0·81 (CI 0·43 to 1·0, P=0·2) after logarithmic transformation of post-prandial serum bile acid concentrations. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE There is strong support for extra-hepatic portosystemic shunts and elevated post-prandial serum bile acid concentrations both being inherited conditions in Maltese.
Australian Veterinary Journal | 2009
S Kuan; Kl Hoffmann; P. L. C. Tisdall
An 11-week-old male entire French Bulldog was presented with a 3-week history of projectile vomiting after eating that was unresponsive to medical therapy. Ultrasonographic examination revealed a 1 x 2 cm pedunculated polypoid mass in the pyloric antrum. Histopathology showed this to be comprised of a pedunculated hyperplastic proliferation of gastric mucosal epithelium and submucosa, with dilatation of the glandular pits and a moderate degree of submucosal fibrosis and small amount of smooth muscle hyperplasia in the submucosa. The tunica muscularis was not involved in the polyp and appeared to be of normal thickness. Surgical treatment by pylorectomy and end-to-end gastroduodenostomy (Billroth I) was successful.
Anatomia Histologia Embryologia | 1997
P. L. C. Tisdall; Geraldine B. Hunt; R. P. Borg; Richard Malik
Anatomical features of the ductus venosus in 84 neonatal dogs are described. The ductus venosus was a straight conduit 1–3 mm wide and 4–12 mm long in pups with a crown‐rump length of 80–200 mm. It arose from the left main portal vein branch opposite the umbilical vein, passed between the left lateral liver lobe and the papillary process of the caudate lobe, and terminated in the dorsal aspect of the proximal part of the left hepatic vein. The left hepatic vein was dilated at this point. There was no variation in the location of the ductus venosus in the animals studied.
Veterinary Surgery | 2004
Geraldine B. Hunt; Anne Kummeling; P. L. C. Tisdall; Andrew M. Marchevsky; Julius M. Liptak; K. Ruth Youmans; Sarah E. Goldsmid; Beck Ja
Australian Veterinary Journal | 1994
P. L. C. Tisdall; Geraldine B. Hunt; C. R. Bellenger; Richard Malik
Australian Veterinary Journal | 2005
Richard Malik; D. L. Griffin; Joanna White; M Rozmanec; P. L. C. Tisdall; S.F. Foster; K. Bell; Frank W. Nicholas
Journal of Small Animal Practice | 2000
P. L. C. Tisdall; Geraldine B. Hunt; K. R. Youmans; Richard Malik
Australian Veterinary Journal | 2006
Richard Malik; Mark Krockenberger; Carolyn R. O'Brien; Joanna White; D. Foster; P. L. C. Tisdall; M. Gunew; P. D. Carr; L. Bodell; C. Mccowan; J. Howe; C. Oakley; Griffin C; Wigney Di; Patricia Martin; Jacqueline M. Norris; Geraldine B. Hunt; David Mitchell; C. Gilpin