Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dry urinary diet and antibiotics to dissolve struvite bladder stones
By Dear, Jonathan D et al.Ā·Published in BMC veterinary researchĀ·2019Ā·Department of Veterinary Medicine and Epidemiology, United StatesĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Evaluation of a dry therapeutic urinary diet and concurrent administration of antimicrobials for struvite cystolith dissolution in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 10 dogs with urinary tract infections and struvite bladder stones were treated with a special dry diet and antibiotics to help dissolve the stones. While five of the dogs showed improvement and had their stones dissolve within about a month, the other five still had symptoms and needed surgery to remove the stones. The study suggests that this diet and antibiotic combination can work for some dogs, but if symptoms continue, surgery may be necessary.
People also search for: dog struvite bladder stones treatment Ā· dog urinary tract infection diet Ā· how to dissolve bladder stones in dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Struvite urolithiasis with bacterial urinary tract infection (UTI) is commonly reported in dogs; few data exist to describe successful dissolution protocols in dogs with naturally occurring disease. We hypothesized that a dry therapeutic urinary diet combined with targeted antimicrobial therapy can effectively dissolve presumptive struvite cystolithiasis in dogs with naturally occurring urease-producing bacterial UTI. RESULTS: Ten dogs with presumed infection-induced struvite cystolithiasis based on lower urinary tract signs (LUTS), radiodense cystoliths, and urease-producing bacterial UTI were enrolled. At enrollment, antimicrobials and dry therapeutic urinary diet were dispensed. In addition to lack of radiographic resolution of urolithiasis, dogs with persistent clinical signs were considered non-responders. There was no significant difference in pH between responders and non-responders; USG was significantly higher in the responder group. Recheck visits continued until radiographic dissolution or failure was documented. Five of the 10 dogs achieved radiographic dissolution of cystolithiasis within a median of 31 days (range 19-103). In the other 5 dogs, surgical urolith removal was necessary due to persistent LUTS (3 dogs within 2 weeks) or lack of continued dissolution noted radiographically (1 dog with numerous cystoliths failed at day 91; 1 dog failed by day 57 with questionable owner compliance). CONCLUSIONS: Dissolution of urinary tract infection induced struvite cystoliths can be accomplished in some dogs fed this dry therapeutic urinary diet in conjunction with antimicrobial therapy. Case selection could increase the likelihood of successful dissolution; however, if calcium phosphate is present, this could also prevent stone dissolution. If clinical signs persist despite diet and antimicrobials, stone removal is advised.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31370897/