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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Death rates and outcomes for dogs with severe anaphylaxis

By Smith, M Ryan et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2020·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Mortality rate and prognostic factors for dogs with severe anaphylaxis: 67 cases (2016-2018).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study looked at 67 dogs who experienced severe allergic reactions (anaphylaxis) and found that about 15% of them did not survive. Dogs that had higher levels of phosphorus in their blood, low body temperatures, and needed extra sugar (dextrose) after arriving at the vet were more likely to die. Despite these serious conditions, many dogs did recover with treatment, which included medications like epinephrine and corticosteroids. The findings suggest that while severe anaphylaxis is dangerous, prompt veterinary care can lead to survival for many affected dogs.

People also search for: dog severe allergic reaction treatment · anaphylaxis in dogs symptoms · dog epinephrine dosage

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine mortality rates for dogs with severe anaphylaxis and identify potential prognostic factors. ANIMALS: 67 dogs with suspected anaphylaxis graded as severe. PROCEDURES: Dogs were classified on the basis of outcome as survivors and nonsurvivors. Medical records were reviewed, and data were extracted including signalment, examination findings, time to hospital admission from onset of clinical signs, CBC results, serum biochemical analysis results, coagulation testing results, and findings on abdominal ultrasonography. Initial treatment within the first 6 hours after hospital admission was recorded for analysis, specifically including the use of epinephrine, diphenhydramine, corticosteroids, antimicrobials, fresh-frozen plasma, and supplemental dextrose. RESULTS: The overall mortality rate was 14.9% (10/67) for dogs with anaphylaxis graded as severe. Serum phosphorus concentration and prothrombin time (PT) were significantly higher in nonsurvivors, compared with survivors. Nonsurvivors had lower presenting body temperatures than survivors. Serum phosphorus concentration ≥ 12.0 mmol/L, hypoglycemia within 6 hours after hospital admission, high PT value, concurrently high PT and partial thromboplastin time (PTT) values > 50% above the reference range limit, and the need for supplemental dextrose were associated with death. The incidences of coagulopathy and peritoneal effusion were unexpectedly high (85.2% and 65.5% of dogs, respectively) but were not indicative of survival. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Despite the poor presenting clinical condition seen in dogs with severe anaphylaxis, the rate of survival with treatment was fairly high. Coagulopathy and the presence of peritoneal effusion were common findings in dogs with severe anaphylaxis. Serum phosphorus concentration ≥ 12.0 mmol/L, high PT value, concurrent increases of PT and PTT values > 50% above reference range limits, hypoglycemia within 6 hours after hospital admission, and the need for supplemental dextrose were associated with death.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32364451/