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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Urine scalding skin sores in dogs and cats explained

By McMahill, Barbara G et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2026·IDEXX Reference Laboratories·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical and histopathological features of urine scalding in dogs and cats.

Drinking & peeing

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old female dog with urinary incontinence developed painful skin sores around her genital area due to urine scalding, a condition caused by prolonged contact with urine. The dog's owner noticed white bumps and ulcers on her skin, which prompted a visit to the veterinarian. After examining her medical history and skin lesions, the vet diagnosed urine scalding and treated the underlying urinary issue. With appropriate care and management of her urinary problems, the dog's skin healed, and she became more comfortable.

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Abstract

Urine irritant contact dermatitis is a clinically well-recognized but poorly documented condition in small animals. This study aims to systematically summarize the clinical and histopathological features of canine and feline urine scalding. Twelve cases, 10 dogs and 2 cats, were identified and included in a retrospective study of medical records and histology samples. All animals had histories of urinary incontinence with urinary problems (ectopic ureters, urolithiasis, urinary tract infection, sphincter mechanism incompetence, etc.) or a genital conformational issue with concurrent urine scalding. Gross lesions varied and included white papules/plaques, discrete nodules, and overt ulcers that localized to perigenital areas and/or involve the abdomen, inguinal areas, and proximal legs. The hallmark histopathological changes were locally extensive epithelial hyperplasia with marked spongiosis (intracellular edema) of the granular and spinous layers, diffuse parakeratosis, and variable degrees of erosion to ulceration with secondary bacterial infection and necrosis. This report summarizes the clinical and histopathological findings in urine scalding and highlights the importance of the clinical history, presentation, and lesion distribution to achieve the correct diagnosis. In the absence of a history or awareness by the pathologist of this unique histopathological pattern, urine scalding could easily be misdiagnosed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41287451/