Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Kidney damage linked to protein loss in Miniature Schnauzer dogs
By Furrow, E et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2017·1 Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Glomerular Lesions in Proteinuric Miniature Schnauzer Dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of Miniature Schnauzers with protein in their urine were examined for kidney issues. Researchers found that many of these dogs had high levels of triglycerides, which can lead to serious conditions like pancreatitis. In 20 of the dogs, they discovered fat deposits in the kidney's filtering units, and some had clumps of fat that were affecting blood flow. This study highlights the need for pet owners to be aware of kidney problems in Miniature Schnauzers, especially if their dog has high triglyceride levels.
People also search for: Miniature Schnauzer kidney problems · dog protein in urine treatment · high triglycerides in dogs
Abstract
Miniature Schnauzer dogs are predisposed to idiopathic hypertriglyerceridemia, which increases risk for diseases such as pancreatitis and gallbladder mucocele. Recently, elevated triglyceride concentrations have been associated with proteinuria in this breed, although it is difficult to determine which abnormality is primary. Retrospective review of renal tissue from 27 proteinuric Miniature Schnauzers revealed that 20 dogs had ultrastructural evidence of osmophilic globules consistent with lipid in glomerular tufts. Seven of these dogs had lipid thromboemboli in glomerular capillary loops that distorted their shape and compressed circulating erythrocytes. Triglyceride concentrations were reported in 6 of these 7 dogs, and all were hypertriglyceridemic. In addition, glomerular lipidosis (defined as accumulation of foam cells within peripheral capillary loops) was identified in a single dog. The remaining 12 dogs had smaller amounts of lipid that could only be identified ultrastructurally. Neither signalment data nor clinicopathologic parameters (serum albumin, serum creatinine, urine protein-to-creatinine ratio, and blood pressure) differed among the various types of lipid lesions. During the time course of this study, all dogs diagnosed with glomerular lipid thromboemboli were Miniature Schnauzers, underscoring the importance of recognizing these clear spaces within capillary loops as lipid.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28005494/