Simini Surgery Review: Small Animal Edition
Welcome to the Simini Surgery Review: Small Animal Edition—your shortcut to staying sharp in small animal surgery. We break down the latest peer-reviewed studies into clear, time-saving episodes you can listen to on your commute, between cases, or while walking the dog. Focused, fast, and clinically relevant—this is how busy surgeons stay current without spending hours digging through journals. Produced by Simini, creators of Simini Protect Lavage—the non-antibiotic lavage designed to target surgical site risks like biofilms and resistant bacteria.
Simini Surgery Review: Small Animal Edition
Veterinary Surgery July 2025 – Soft Tissue Part 3: Laser Sphincterotomy, Feline PANS & Lap Chole in Cats
In this Simini Small Animal Surgery Podcast episode, we explore three cutting-edge studies from the July 2025 issue of Veterinary Surgery—each one helping refine high-risk soft tissue interventions through better diagnostics, emerging techniques, and practical survival insights.
We cover:
✅ Miyagi et al. — An ex vivo pilot study demonstrating the feasibility of endoscopic-assisted laser sphincterotomy (EARC) for the intramural bile duct in dogs. They achieved 100% procedural success in 18 cadavers and identified a reliable visual cue to guide incision—offering a safer, minimally invasive future for biliary access.
✅ Otero Balda et al. — A multicenter retrospective study of 59 cats with post-attenuation neurologic signs (PANS) following CPSS surgery. While 78% survived to 30 days, generalized seizures dropped survival to 50%. Propofol use flagged more severe cases but wasn’t directly causal.
✅ Poggi et al. — A 22-cat case series of laparoscopic cholecystectomy—the first published feline series of its kind. The results? 100% completion, 4.5% mortality, and shorter hospital stays versus open surgery—if you choose cases carefully and watch for post-op EHBDO.
Three studies. One message: risk doesn’t rule out innovation—if you plan carefully.
🎓 Journal Articles Discussed:
- Miyagi et al. — Endoscopic-assisted laser sphincterotomy of the intramural
common bile duct: A cadaveric pilot study - Otero Balda et al. — Prognostic factors for short-term survival of cats that
experienced postattenuation neurologic signs after surgical
attenuation of single congenital portosystemic shunts - Poggi et al. — Laparoscopic cholecystectomy in 22 cats (2018–2024)
📚 From the July 2025 issue of Veterinary Surgery
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