PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with aldosteronoma showing excessive urination as main sign

By Rijnberk, A et al.·Published in Domestic animal endocrinology·2001·Department of Clinical Sciences of Companion Animals, Netherlands·View original on PubMed

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Aldosteronoma in a dog with polyuria as the leading symptom.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 10-year-old male German Shorthaired Pointer was brought in for excessive urination (polyuria). Tests showed low potassium levels and other abnormalities, leading to a diagnosis of primary hyperaldosteronism, a condition where the adrenal glands produce too much aldosterone. Initially, the dog was treated with spironolactone, a medication that blocks aldosterone, but it only worked at higher doses that caused side effects. Eventually, a CT scan revealed a small tumor on the adrenal gland, and after surgery to remove it, the dog's urination returned to normal, and his blood levels stabilized.

People also search for: dog excessive urination treatment · German Shorthaired Pointer adrenal tumor · spironolactone for dog polyuria

Abstract

In a 10-year-old castrated male shorthaired German pointer polyuria was associated with slight hypokalemia, hypophosphatemia and alkalosis, as well as elevated plasma concentrations of a glucocorticoid-inducible iso-enzyme of alkaline phosphatase. Repeated measurements of urinary corticoids and normal suppressibility of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenocorticial axis excluded glucocorticoid excess. Urine osmolality (Uosm) did not increase during administration of the vasopressin analogue desmopressin. At the time water deprivation had caused Uosm to rise from 300 to 788 mOsm/kg, there was also plasma hypertonicity. During hypertonic saline infusion the osmotic threshold for vasopressin release was increased. The combination of elevated plasma aldosterone concentrations and unmeasurably low plasma renin activity pointed to primary hyperaldosteronism. As initially computed tomography (CT) did not reveal an adrenocortical lesion, the dog was treated with the aldosterone antagonist spironolactone. This caused Uosm to rise in a dose-dependent manner. However, well-concentrated urine was only achieved with doses that gave rise to adverse effects. Once repeated CT, using 2-mm-thick slices, had revealed a small nodule in the cranial pole of the left adrenal, unilateral adrenalectomy was performed which resolved the polyuria completely. Also the plasma concentrations of kalium, aldosterone and renin activity returned to within their respective reference ranges. The adrenocortical nodule had the histological characteristics of an aldosteronoma, with the non-affected zona glomerulosa being atrophic.In this dog with primary hyperaldosteronism the polyuria was characterized by vasopressin resistance and increased osmotic threshold of vasopressin release, similar to the polyuria of glucocorticoid excess. The possibility is discussed that the polyuria of glucocorticoid excess is actually a mineralocorticoid effect.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11438403/