Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with kidney cyst treated by laparoscopic surgery and long-term
By Dekerle, Bastien et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2022·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Long-term follow-up of a juvenile simple renal cyst in a dog treated by laparoscopic deroofing, fulguration, and omentalization.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 10-month-old male crossbred dog was brought in for increased urination and thirst over the past month, along with vomiting for six months. The vet found abdominal pain and a swollen kidney, and imaging revealed a fluid-filled cyst in the kidney. After an initial drainage failed and the symptoms returned, the dog underwent a laparoscopic procedure to remove the cyst. Fortunately, the dog recovered well, and follow-up two years later showed no signs of the cyst returning and normal kidney function.
People also search for: dog vomiting and increased thirst · dog kidney cyst treatment · laparoscopic surgery for dog cyst
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION: A 10-month-old male crossbred dog presented with a 4-week history of polyuria and polydipsia and a 6-month history of vomiting. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Clinical examination revealed abdominal pain and right-sided nephromegaly. Biochemistry was within normal limits. Diagnostic imaging showed a well-defined, unilateral renal mass containing anechoic fluid consistent with a simple renal cyst (SRC). TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: The cyst was drained under ultrasonographic guidance but recurred 3 months later, concomitant with recurrence of the previously reported clinical signs. The cyst was then deroofed, fulgurated, and omentalized under laparoscopy by use of a 3-port technique. The resected cystic wall was histopathologically consistent with an SRC, presumptively congenital. The dog showed a good recovery with resolution of clinical signs. Renal function was normal at last follow-up, conducted 2 years postoperatively, without evidence of recurrent disease. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: To our knowledge, this was the first report of a symptomatic juvenile SRC of presumptively congenital origin in a dog treated successfully by laparoscopic deroofing, fulguration, and omentalization. The polyuria, polydipsia, chronic vomiting, and abdominal pain may all have been related to space-occupying effects of the cyst, as these symptoms resolved post-treatment. Results of long-term follow-up advocate for this durable cure of SRC by use of laparoscopic procedures, especially when compared to simple drainage of the cyst, as the latter initially failed in the present case.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35263277/