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Abstract A 5‐year‐old female spayed Dogue de Bordeaux was referred for concerns of an abdominal mass and peritoneal effusion. Abdominal radiographs identified a mid‐ventral abdominal soft tissue opaque mass containing a radiopaque marker consistent with a gossypiboma. Contrast‐enhanced abdominal CT identified two whirl signs associated with the abdominal gossypiboma. Exploratory laparotomy confirmed an omental torsion with encapsulated gossypiboma and concurrent incidental torsion of the remnant of the right broad ligament. Based on a literature review, omental torsions are an unreported complication of gossypibomas in canids.
Ball et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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