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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How chronic kidney disease progresses in dogs with treatment

By Perini-Perera, Sofía et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2021·Hospital Veterinario para Peque&#xf1·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of Chronic Kidney Disease Progression in Dogs With Therapeutic Management of Risk Factors.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with chronic kidney disease (CKD) was monitored over time to see how the disease progressed and how managing certain risk factors could help. Most of the dogs were older, and many had other health issues like heart disease or infections. During the study, nearly half of the dogs showed worsening kidney function, especially those in advanced stages. However, dogs that received timely treatment based on early warning signs, like increased levels of a specific blood marker (SDMA), had better outcomes and lived longer. This shows that early detection and management can help stabilize CKD and improve survival rates.

People also search for: dog chronic kidney disease symptoms · CKD treatment for dogs · dog kidney disease survival rate

Abstract

This research was performed to describe the characteristics of the progression of naturally occurring chronic kidney disease (CKD) in dogs, together with the management of identified risk factors, following the International Renal Interest Society recommendations. Dogs diagnosed and staged with CKD, and with a longitudinal follow-up from the moment of diagnosis of up to a maximum of 730 days, were included. A total of 545 dogs that presented risk factors for the development of CKD were analyzed, out of which 36 met the inclusion criteria. Advanced age was identified in 80.6% of cases. Initiation risk factors were represented by inflammatory/infectious diseases, history of anesthetic-surgical procedures, heart disease, neoplasms, endocrinopathies, and exposure to nephrotoxic drugs. During the follow-up period, progression of CKD was identified in 47.2% of the cases, being more salient in advanced stages. Serum symmetric dimethyl arginine (SDMA) was the only glomerular filtration rate (GFR) marker which displayed differences among studied times during early stages of CKD, associated with the disease progression and decline of renal function. A significant difference between the survival curves in early and advanced CKD stages was observed. The factors related to decreased survival were hyperphosphatemia, anemia, and low body condition score (BCS). No differences were found between the presence of arterial hypertension and renal proteinuria and decreased survival. Furthermore, CKD diagnosis based on the persistent finding of abnormalities in early disease markers, such as serum symmetric dimethyl arginine increase and/or renal proteinuria, and timely therapeutic management of risk factors, allowed for CKD stabilization, reducing progression to advanced stages, and favoring higher survival rates.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34026884/