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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bladder rupture in late-pregnancy mares: Four cases.

Journal:
Journal of equine veterinary science
Year:
2025
Authors:
Salcedo-Jiménez, R et al.
Affiliation:
Departamento de Medicina
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

This report discusses four pregnant mares that experienced a serious condition called bladder rupture, which means their bladder had torn. These mares were either overdue for giving birth or at the expected time, and they showed signs of discomfort in their belly or trouble delivering their foals. Three of the mares had symptoms related to the bladder issue, such as needing to urinate more often or having blood in their urine. Diagnosing this condition required thorough testing, including checking fluid levels in the abdomen and using a camera to look inside the bladder. Ultimately, two of the mares were able to leave the hospital after treatment, while the diagnosis can sometimes take a few days if there are no obvious signs of fluid buildup in the abdomen.

Abstract

This case series reports four late pregnancy broodmares that were diagnosed with bladder rupture. The initial presentations were abdominal discomfort (n = 3) and dystocia (n = 1). All mares (n = 4) were overdue or at their expected time of delivery. Three mares showed clinical signs related to bladder rupture: pollakiuria (n = 2) and hematuria (n = 1). At the time of diagnosis, three mares had increased peritoneal fluid creatinine, the mean peritoneal: serum creatinine ratio was 4.1, and the bladder tear was observed via cystoscopy in 3 cases. Two mares were discharged from the hospital. Complete evaluation of the clinical, clinicopathological, repeated ultrasonographic, and cystoscopic examination was necessary to diagnose this condition. In three of the four cases there was no accumulation of free peritoneal fluid upon initial examination, which may delay the diagnosis for 2-3 days until the uroperitoneum can be diagnosed. Broodmares past their expected foaling date, showing signs of colic and pollakiuria should be suspected of bladder rupture.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39863000/