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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Urinary incontinence in cats non-neurologic causes and outcomes

By Isabelle Mérindol et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2021·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Feline urinary incontinence: a retrospective case series (2009–2019)

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats, including 18 with urinary incontinence (leaking urine while resting or dribbling), were evaluated for underlying causes at a veterinary hospital. The most common issue found was urethral obstruction, often due to strictures. Advanced imaging tests like cystoscopy helped diagnose the problem, and 12 cats underwent procedures to relieve the obstruction. Most of these cats saw a complete resolution of their incontinence, with only a few developing urinary tract infections afterward.

People also search for: cat urinary incontinence treatment · why is my cat leaking urine · urethral obstruction in cats · cat dribbling urine causes

Abstract

Objectives The objective of this retrospective study was to describe the feline population presented for urinary incontinence at a veterinary teaching hospital between 2009 and 2019, with a particular focus on cats with a non-neurologic underlying cause. Methods The medical records of cats diagnosed with urinary incontinence were retrospectively evaluated. Signalment, clinical presentation, results of diagnostic tests, diagnosis of the underlying cause and treatments were recorded. When information was available, outcome was recorded and follow-ups divided into three time frames (0–1 week, 1 week to 3 months and >3 months). Results Thirty-five cats were presented with urinary incontinence. Of these, 18 cats with complete medical records presented urinary incontinence of non-neurologic origin. The most common clinical signs at presentation were urine leakage while resting (12/18), urine-soiled perineum (8/18), urine dribbling (8/18) and no spontaneous micturition (5/18). The most common underlying cause was urethral obstruction (67%; 12/18), with a majority due to urethral strictures (58%; 7/12). Other causes were suspected inflammation (2/12), neoplasia (1/12), urolithiasis (1/12) and foreign body (1/12). In 8/10 cats in which it was performed, cystoscopy and contrast cystourethrography were the methods that led to the diagnosis. Twelve cats with urethral obstruction underwent interventional procedures, resulting in complete resolution of incontinence in 7/12 and improvement in 1/12. Urinary tract infection was a common complication after 3 months (4/18). Conclusions and relevance When incontinence of non-neurologic origin is suspected in a cat, urethral obstruction should be considered. Advanced imaging studies (cystoscopy and contrast studies) are useful for diagnosis. A good prognosis was reported in cats undergoing interventional procedures with no long-term treatment.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/34346241