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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How finasteride affects prostate blood flow in dogs with BPH

By Angrimani, D S R et al.·Published in Theriogenology·2018·Department of Animal Reproduction, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Effects of benign prostatic hyperplasia and finasteride therapy on prostatic blood flow in dogs.

Species:
dog
Drinking & peeingDogs

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old mixed breed dog was diagnosed with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), which caused symptoms like difficulty urinating and blood in the semen. The veterinarian prescribed finasteride, a medication that helps reduce prostate size and blood flow. After two months of treatment, the dog's prostate showed a significant decrease in size and blood flow, improving his symptoms. Finasteride proved to be an effective option for managing BPH in this dog, offering a non-surgical alternative.

People also search for: dog prostate enlargement treatment · finasteride for dogs · blood in dog semen causes

Abstract

Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is characterized by an enlargement of the prostate accompanied by an increase in prostatic blood perfusion and vascularization. The most indicated treatment is to perform orchiectomy, however, medical treatment with finasteride can be an option for breeding dogs or elderly animals with a critical health status. In dogs, the influence of medical treatment on prostatic hemodynamics is still unknown. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the effects of benign prostatic hyperplasia and finasteride therapy on hemodynamic and vascular features of the canine prostate. For this purpose, twenty dogs of different breeds, body weights (10-30 kg) and ages (5-13 years) were used, assigned for: Healthy-non treated group (n = 5), BPH-non treated group (n = 5), Healthy-finasteride treated group (n = 5) and BPH-finasteride treated group (n = 5). Dogs that presented hematospermia and at least one general clinical sign (tenesmus, hematuria or dysuria) were presumptively diagnosed with BPH. Dogs were evaluated ultrasonographycally by B-mode and Doppler of the prostatic artery in a monthly interval (day 0, 30 and 60) in order to measure prostate volume (PV), expected prostate volume (EPV), prostate vascularization score (scored as minimum, intermediary and maximum) and prostatic artery blood flow parameters with the use of spectral and color Doppler ultrasound. It was possible to observe a decrease in prostate vascularization score between Day 0 (intermediary degree) and 60 (minimum degree) in finasteride treated dogs. Moreover, non-treated dogs had higher score of vascularization at Day 60 compared to animals treated with finasteride, regardless of BPH diagnosis. Healthy-non treated animals presented higher peak systolic:diastolic velocity (S/D) than BPH-non treated dogs. Furthermore, BPH-non treated dogs had lower S/D than BPH-finasteride treated dogs. In 30 and 60 days, no difference on PV was observed between BPH-finasteride treated group and Healthy-non treated group. At day 60, no difference between PV and EPV was observed for the BPH-finasteride treated group. In conclusion, finasteride treatment reduces simultaneously the volume, local vascularization and blood flow of the prostate, thus, being considered an effective and additional choice of therapy for BPH. Moreover, the course of therapy in dogs can be followed by analyzing changes in prostatic artery.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29605575/