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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with recurring bladder infection treated with EDTA and antibiotics

By Leynaud, Vincent et al.·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2024·Universit&#xe9, France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Adjunctive intravesical EDTA-tromethamine treatment of a biofilm-associated recurrentcystitis in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 15-month-old spayed female Greater Swiss Mountain Dog was brought in for recurring urinary tract infections that had been troubling her since she was adopted at 2 months old. After thorough testing, the vet found she had chronic bacterial cystitis caused by a type of bacteria that forms a protective biofilm, making it hard to treat with standard antibiotics. The treatment included infusions of EDTA-tromethamine, along with a specific antibiotic and preventive measures like probiotics. Thanks to this combination, the dog has been free of urinary tract infection symptoms for over four years now.

People also search for: dog urinary tract infection treatment · recurrent cystitis in dogs · EDTA for dog bladder infection

Abstract

A 15-month-old spayed female greater Swiss mountain dog was brought to our clinic because of relapsing episodes of urinary tract infection, present since her adoption at 2 mo of age. A diagnosis of chronic bacterial cystitis associated with an invasive, biofilm-forming uropathogenicwas made with bladder-wall histology and fluorescenthybridization analysis. Local treatment with EDTA-tromethamine (EDTA-Tris) infusions along with parenteral cefquinome and prophylactic measures (Type-A proanthocyanidins and probiotics) coincided with clinical and bacterial remission. The dog has been free of clinical signs of urinary tract infection for >4 y. Biofilm-forming uropathogeniccan cause chronic, recurrent cystitis due to low antibiotic efficacy and should be considered in cases of recurrent cystitis in dogs, especially in the absence of identified predisposing factors. This case report describes the diagnostic and therapeutic options that were used to manage a case of this type. Key clinical message: Fluorescenthybridization analysis may be considered in the diagnosis of chronic bacterial cystitis in dogs, and intravesical instillations of EDTA-Tris may be helpful in managing such cases.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39219609/