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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with kidney failure from lily poisoning improved after furosemide

By To, An et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2023·Department of Emergency and Critical Care, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Case report: Resolution of oligo-anuric acute kidney injury with furosemide administration in a cat following lily toxicity.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 12-week-old male domestic short-hair cat was brought to the vet after vomiting and being lethargic for 12 hours, following exposure to lilies, which are toxic to cats. Tests showed severe kidney damage and high potassium levels. The vet treated the cat with several medications to stabilize its condition and then gave it furosemide, a diuretic, which helped the cat start urinating again within six hours. After four days of treatment, the cat's kidney function returned to normal, and it was sent home healthy.

People also search for: cat lily poisoning treatment · kitten vomiting lethargy · furosemide for cat kidney injury

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the successful outcome of a case of oligo-anuric acute kidney injury in a cat secondary to lily ingestion. CASE SUMMARY: A 12-week-old intact male domestic short-hair cat weighing 1.64 kg (3.6 lb) presented with a 12-h duration of vomiting and lethargy after exposure to lilies of the generaspecies 24 h prior to presentation. Severe azotemia (Creatinine 5.8 mg/dL, BUN > 100 mg/dL) and hyperkalemia (9.36 mmol/L) were noted on the day of presentation. Treatment of hyperkalemia was instituted with calcium gluconate, lactated ringers solution, dextrose, regular short-acting insulin, albuterol, and sodium bicarbonate, Oliguria to anuria was highly suspected based on a lack of urine production 21 h after hospitalization with intravenous fluid administration and a static bladder size. The cat was administered 4 mg/kg of furosemide, and urinated at 6 h following administration and continued to produce over 6 ml/kg/h of urine in the next 24 h. Two days following furosemide administration, the cat's hyperkalemia and azotemia resolved. The cat was discharged after 4 days of hospitalization, and a recheck revealed no persistent azotemia or hyperkalemia. UNIQUE INFORMATION: Anuric acute kidney injury secondary to lily toxicity is associated with a poor prognosis, and the only treatment modality previously described is hemodialysis. The cat in this report was successfully managed with medical intervention and furosemide administration, with complete resolution of the acute kidney injury.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37476822/