In Kuvaldina 2023 et al., in Minimally invasive axillary lymphadenectomy in dogs, what was the most common reason for conversion from endoscopic to open axillary lymph node excision?
A. Intraoperative hemorrhage
B. Inability to locate the lymph node
C. Inadequate insufflation pressure
D. Lymph node immobility preventing elevation
E. Instrument failure
Answer: Lymph node immobility preventing elevation
Explanation: One clinical case required conversion due to inability to elevate the axillary node into the dissection field.
In Kuvaldina 2023 et al., in Minimally invasive axillary lymphadenectomy in dogs, what was the average surgical time for excising the axillary lymph node in cadaveric specimens?
A. 12 minutes
B. 24 minutes
C. 33 minutes
D. 41 minutes
E. 56 minutes
Answer: 33 minutes
Explanation: The mean surgical time to excise the axillary lymph node in cadavers was 33 minutes.
In Kuvaldina 2023 et al., in Minimally invasive axillary lymphadenectomy in dogs, what anatomical variation was noted during cadaver dissection?
A. Absence of the axillary node in 2 limbs
B. A fused axillary and prescapular lymph node
C. Double axillary lymph node in one limb
D. Accessory node located caudal to thoracic duct
E. Displaced thoracodorsal artery
Answer: Double axillary lymph node in one limb
Explanation: One limb had two distinct axillary lymph nodes, an important anatomical finding noted during cadaveric dissection.
In Kuvaldina 2023 et al., in Minimally invasive axillary lymphadenectomy in dogs, which of the following best describes postoperative morbidity in the 3 clinical patients?
A. One dog developed lymphedema and seroma
B. All dogs had prolonged drainage and mild infection
C. Minor seroma or lameness resolved without intervention
D. Two cases required revision surgery
E. All dogs remained hospitalized >72 hours
Answer: Minor seroma or lameness resolved without intervention
Explanation: Postoperative morbidity was minimal; all clinical cases recovered uneventfully with no major complications.
In Kuvaldina 2023 et al., in Minimally invasive axillary lymphadenectomy in dogs, which technique was used for access in the minimally invasive procedure?
A. Gasless lift system
B. Trocar-less blunt dissection
C. Single-incision laparoscopic surgery (SILS) port
D. Modified Veress needle entry
E. Flexible ureteroscope
Answer: Single-incision laparoscopic surgery (SILS) port
Explanation: A SILS port was used in all cadaveric and clinical endoscopic procedures to enable instrument triangulation.