Skip to main page content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

Https

The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

Access keys NCBI Homepage MyNCBI Homepage Main Content Main Navigation
. 2022 Jan;32(S1):81-96.
doi: 10.1111/vec.13117.

Interpreting abdominal fluid in colic horses: Understanding and applying peritoneal fluid evidence

Affiliations

Interpreting abdominal fluid in colic horses: Understanding and applying peritoneal fluid evidence

Rolfe M Radcliffe et al. J Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio). 2022 Jan.

Abstract

Background: Interpreting changes in peritoneal fluid helps clinicians manage colic and other diseases in horses. During abdominal problems in the horse, abdominal fluid characteristics such as color, turbidity, total nucleated and red blood cell counts, cytology, total protein, and l-lactate change in predictable ways, helping the clinician characterize the disease.

Description: Normal abdominal fluid in horses is odorless, clear to light yellow in color, and transparent. Peritoneal fluid becomes more turbid with increasing levels of protein, number of WBCs or RBCs, or with gross contamination following intestinal rupture. The color of abdominal fluid will also change with the type and quantity of cells or other elements present. The transformation of peritoneal fluid color from golden to orange to red represents increasing levels of RBCs, common with strangulating intestinal lesions. Serosanguinous defines fluid that is both turbid and orange to bloody because of increased total protein, WBCs, and RBCs, and is considered classic for diseases characterized by intestinal ischemia. Peritoneal fluid may also be red or blood-colored because of a hemoperitoneum, or secondary to blood contamination during sample collection. l-Lactate measurement in the abdominal fluid has proven invaluable for the identification of strangulating intestinal injury. Cytology acts as an important supplement to cell counts in peritoneal fluid, and the normal ratio of non-degenerate neutrophils:mononuclear cells of 2:1 changes during various gastrointestinal diseases. Culture of peritoneal fluid samples should be performed when septic peritonitis is suspected.

Summary: Abdominal fluid is a sensitive indicator of intestinal injury and a useful tool to direct treatment. Peritoneal fluid evaluation includes gross visual and olfactory examination, nucleated cell count, total protein, RBC count, lactate levels, cytology, and culture. The changes noted in such variables are related to the type and duration of the abdominal problem.

Key points: Abdominal fluid interpretation has become central to the triage and management of challenging equine colic patients. The transformation of peritoneal fluid color from golden to orange to red represents increasing levels of RBCs, common with strangulating intestinal lesions. Contamination with RBCs at various concentrations may be secondary to vascular (eg, abdominal wall or mesenteric vessels) or splenic trauma during abdominal fluid collection; however, this must be distinguished from orange to red fluid associated with intestinal strangulating obstruction or hemoabdomen Peritoneal fluid analysis reveals abdominal pathology by recognizing specific changes that occur with disease processes affecting the tissues and organs within this cavity. Abdominal fluid examination should be used as a tool to direct treatment rather than the definitive test for diagnosis of the acute abdomen Septic peritonitis in horses most commonly originates secondary to intestinal compromise or accidents (vascular damage, perforation, or surgical manipulation), leading to bacterial translocation into the abdomen.

Keywords: abdominocentesis; colic; intestine; peritoneal fluid; septic abdomen.

PubMed Disclaimer

References

    1. White NA II. Determining the diagnosis and prognosis of the acute abdomen. The Equine Acute Abdomen. 1st ed. Malvern: Lea & Febiger; 1990, pp. 101-147.
    1. Mair T. Abdominocentesis (abdominal paracentesis). In: Mair TS, Divers TJ, Ducharme NG, eds. Manual of Equine Gastroenterology. 1st ed. St. Louis: WB Saunders. 2002, pp. 13-20.
    1. Dallap Schaer B, Orsini JA. Gastrointestinal system. In: Orsini JA, Divers TJ, eds. Equine Emergencies: Treatment and Procedures. 4th ed. St. Louis: Elsevier; 2014, pp. 157-237.
    1. Hunt E, Tennant BC, Whitlock RH. Interpretation of peritoneal fluid erythrocyte counts in horses with abdominal disease. Proc Eq Colic Res Symp 1986; 2:168-174.
    1. Stokol T. Cytology. In: Orsini JA, Divers TJ, eds. Equine Emergencies: Treatment and Procedures. 4th ed. St. Louis: Elsevier; 2014, pp. 37-60.

LinkOut - more resources