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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Minimally invasive surgery helps female dogs with ectopic ureters

By Jacobson, Else et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2022·Internal Medicine Department, Australia·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cystoscopic-guided scissor transection of intramural ectopic ureters as a novel alternate minimally invasive treatment option to laser ablation in female dogs: 8 cases (2011-2020).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Eight female dogs with urinary incontinence due to ectopic ureters (a condition where the ureters connect to the bladder in the wrong place) underwent a new procedure called cystoscopic-guided scissor transection (CST-EU). After the treatment, six of the dogs showed immediate improvement in their ability to hold urine. At follow-up, three dogs were completely continent, while others improved with additional medications. The procedure had minor complications, and most owners were very satisfied with the results, indicating they would choose this treatment again if needed.

People also search for: dog urinary incontinence treatment · ectopic ureters in female dogs · cystoscopic surgery for dogs · dog bladder surgery recovery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of cystoscopic-guided scissor transection of ectopic ureters (CST-EU) in female dogs. ANIMALS: 8 incontinent female dogs with intramural ectopic ureters. PROCEDURES: For this retrospective case series, data were collected from medical records of dogs that underwent CST-EU to relocate the ectopic ureteral orifice to an anatomically normal trigonal location between June 2011 and December 2020. Outcome after hospital discharge was determined using owner telephone questionnaires. RESULTS: Ectopic ureters were bilateral in 4 of the 8 dogs, and all dogs had other urogenital tract anomalies. Owner questionnaire follow-up was available for 7 dogs, and results indicated 6 dogs had improved urinary continence immediately following the procedure. At the last follow-up (44 to 3,384 days after CST-EU), 3 of the 7 dogs were completely continent with CST-EU alone, 3 others became continent or were markedly improved with the addition of medications for urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence, and 1 required ureteroneocystostomy, colposuspension, and an artificial urethral sphincter to become fully continent. Owners of 5 of the 7 dogs reported that they considered the outcome of CST-EU as good to excellent, and all owners reported that they would consider having CST-EU performed again should they have another incontinent dog. Complications were minor, and only 3 dogs showed transient lower urinary tract signs after CST-EU. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results indicated CST-EU could provide a safe, effective, minimally invasive alternative in the absence of laser technology for the treatment of intramural ectopic ureters in female dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35290202/