Wallace K D, Selcer B A, Tyler D E, Brown J
Department of Anatomy and Radiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens 30602.
Am J Vet Res. 1989 Oct;50(10):1699-703.
Transrectal ultrasonography was performed on the cranial mesenteric artery and its major branches in 23 conscious adult horses. Ultrasonographically, 25 arterial segments were classified as either normal or abnormal. These ultrasonographic classifications were later compared with the gross and histologic evaluations of each artery following necropsy of each horse. In this study, transrectal ultrasonography as a diagnostic test for verminous arteritis had a 90% sensitivity for detecting normal arteries and an 86% specificity for detecting abnormal arteries, suggesting that ultrasonography may be useful in the antemortem diagnosis of verminous arteritis.