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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bacterial gallbladder infection in dogs - treatment and outcomes

By Lawrence, Yuri A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2015·Department of Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Characterization, treatment, and outcome of bacterial cholecystitis and bactibilia in dogs.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs, including several Dachshunds, was diagnosed with bacterial cholecystitis (an infection of the gallbladder) and bactibilia (bacteria in the bile) after showing signs of biliary tract disease. The dogs underwent various tests, including ultrasounds and surgeries, which revealed immobile biliary sludge and bacterial infections. Treatment involved both medical and surgical options, leading to good recovery outcomes for the affected dogs. This case highlights the importance of checking for bacterial infections in dogs with gallbladder issues, especially in certain breeds like Dachshunds.

People also search for: dog gallbladder infection treatment · Dachshund biliary sludge symptoms · bacterial cholecystitis in dogs

Abstract

Objective-To characterize historical, clinicopathologic, ultrasonographic, microbiological, surgical, and histopathologic features of bacterial cholecystitis and bactibilia in dogs and evaluate response to treatment and outcomes in these patients. Design-Retrospective case-control study. Animals-40 client-owned dogs (10 with bacterial cholecystitis on histologic analysis or bactibilia on cytologic examination [case dogs] and 30 without bactibilia [controls]) evaluated at a veterinary teaching hospital between 2010 and 2014. Procedures-Signalment, history, clinicopathologic findings, ultrasonographic features, microbiological results, surgical findings, histopathologic changes, treatments, and outcomes of case dogs were derived from medical records and summarized. Demographic and clinicopathologic data and ultrasonographic findings were compared between case and control dogs. Relationships among prior antimicrobial treatment, sediment formation in the gallbladder, presence of immobile biliary sludge, and presence of bactibilia or bacterial cholecystitis were assessed. Results-No finding was pathognomonic for bactibilia or bacterial cholecystitis in dogs. Case dogs were significantly more likely to have immobile biliary sludge and had a greater degree of biliary sediment formation than did control dogs. All case dogs for which gallbladders were examined histologically (6/6) had bacterial cholecystitis. Five of 10 case dogs were Dachshunds. Medical or surgical treatment resulted in good outcomes. Conclusions and Clinical Relevance-Bactibilia and bacterial cholecystitis were important differential diagnoses in dogs with signs referable to biliary tract disease. Dachshunds were overrepresented, which may suggest a breed predisposition. Cytologic evaluation of bile should be considered in the routine assessment of dogs with hepatobiliary disease if immobile biliary sludge is present. (J Am Vet Med Assoc 2015;246:982-989).

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25875669/