Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Polypoid cystitis causing urine scalding in two pet rabbits
By Di Girolamo, Nicola et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2017·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cystoscopic diagnosis of polypoid cystitis in two pet rabbits.
- Species:
- rabbit
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old male Dwarf rabbit and a 4-year-old female Mini-Rex rabbit were brought in because they were not eating and had urine scalding on their bottoms. X-rays showed sludge in their bladders, and an ultrasound revealed growths inside the bladder. The rabbits underwent a procedure called cystoscopy to confirm the diagnosis of polypoid cystitis (a type of bladder inflammation with growths). They were treated with pain relief, antibiotics, and a special diet, which helped the female rabbit stay healthy for a year after treatment, while the male rabbit sadly passed away from unrelated issues 18 months later.
People also search for: rabbit urine scalding treatment · polypoid cystitis in rabbits · rabbit not eating causes
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION AS-year-old male Dwarf rabbit and 4-year-old female Mini-Rex rabbit were evaluated because of anorexia and urine scalding of the perineum. CLINICAL FINDINGS Abdominal radiography revealed a diffuse increase in the opacity of the urinary bladder attributable to urinary sludge. In 1 rabbit, abdominal ultrasonography revealed several mass-like lesions protruding from the mucosal surface into the lumen of the urinary bladder. Rabbits were anesthetized, and cystoscopy was performed with a rigid 2.7-mm, 30° endoscope. Histologic analysis of tissue samples obtained through the cystoscope operating channel revealed findings consistent with polypoid cystitis. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME To remove the urinary sludge from each rabbit, the urinary bladder was filled with sterile saline (0.9% NaCl) solution and emptied with a gentle massage several times until the ejected fluid was transparent. Rabbits were treated with NSAIDs, antimicrobials (chosen following microbial culture of urine and antimicrobial susceptibility testing), bathing of the perineum, and a low-calcium diet. The male rabbit died of unrelated causes 18 months later; postmortem examination findings confirmed the polypoid cystitis. The female rabbit remained disease free through to last follow-up (12 months after initial evaluation). CLINICAL RELEVANCE This was the first report of polypoid cystitis in pet rabbits. Although ultrasonographic findings supported this diagnosis, a definitive diagnosis was achieved through cystoscopy and lesion biopsy. Treatments administered were intended to reduce the potential sources of irritation. Research is needed to investigate the effectiveness of the applied interventions and the association between excessive urinary calcium excretion and polyploid cystitis in rabbits.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28621590/