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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Long-term ketoprofen effects on stomach health in beagle dogs

By Narita, Tatsuya et al.·Published in The Journal of veterinary medical science·2005·Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Effects of long-term oral administration of ketoprofen in clinically healthy beagle dogs.

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Drinking & peeingDogs

Plain-English summary

Five healthy Beagle dogs were given a pain medication called ketoprofen for 30 days to see if it caused any side effects. While some stomach issues and minor changes in kidney function were noted, these effects were not significant enough to be a concern for healthy dogs. Overall, the dogs did not show serious problems from the medication, but the researchers suggest that more studies are needed to understand how ketoprofen might affect dogs with existing kidney issues.

People also search for: beagle dog pain medication side effects · ketoprofen for dogs · long-term effects of ketoprofen in dogs

Abstract

To investigate the adverse effects of long-term administration of ketoprofen in dogs, ketoprofen (1 mg/kg) was administered to five clinically healthy beagle dogs (ketoprofen group) and gelatin capsules (control group) were administered to four clinically healthy beagle dogs for 30 days. We monitored the dogs through periodic physical examination, blood analyses, endoscopic examinations, fecal occult blood tests, renal function tests, urinalysis, urinary enzyme indices and cuticle bleeding time analysis. The lesions in the stomach, especially in the pyloric antrum, and fecal occult blood progressively worsened in the ketoprofen group. However, the differences between the ketoprofen group and the control group were not statistically significant. One dog in the ketoprofen group temporarily exhibited a decrease in renal plasma flow and two dogs exhibited enzymuria. However, these changes did not persist and the other examinations showed no significant difference between premedication and postmedication in the ketoprofen group. Therefore, the adverse effects of long-term administration of ketoprofen observed in this study were not clinically important in healthy dogs. Nevertheless, further investigation of adverse renal effects from long-term administration of ketoprofen is necessary in the dogs with subclinical renal disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16210794/