Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Povidone iodine treatment for blood in urine in two dogs
By Adelman, Lauren B et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2017·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Povidone iodine sclerotherapy for treatment of idiopathic renal hematuria in two dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 6-year-old female Great Pyrenees and a 2-year-old female German Shepherd were both brought in for blood in their urine, which had been happening for several months. After tests showed no infections and some unusual findings in their bladders, the dogs were diagnosed with idiopathic renal hematuria (blood in urine with no known cause). They were treated with a procedure that involved injecting a solution called povidone iodine into their kidneys and placing a stent to help with urine flow. Both dogs recovered well, with the blood in their urine stopping within 12 hours, and their owners reported improvements in their conditions afterward.
People also search for: dog blood in urine treatment · Great Pyrenees hematuria · German Shepherd kidney treatment · povidone iodine for dogs · dog urinary stent recovery
Abstract
CASE DESCRIPTION A 6-year-old spayed female Great Pyrenees (dog 1) and a 2-year-old spayed female German Shepherd Dog (dog 2) were evaluated because of gross hematuria of 5 and 2 months' duration, respectively. CLINICAL FINDINGS In both dogs, coagulation times were within reference limits, results of aerobic bacterial culture of urine samples were negative, echogenic debris could be seen within the urinary bladder ultrasonographically, and hematuric urine could be seen exiting the right ureterovesicular junction, with grossly normal urine exiting the left ureterovesicular junction, during cystoscopy. A diagnosis of idiopathic renal hematuria was made in both dogs. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME Both dogs underwent retrograde ureteropyelography, unilateral povidone iodine sclerotherapy, and ureteral stent placement. The right ureter was occluded with a ureteropelvic junction balloon catheter, and a 5% povidone iodine solution was infused into the renal pelvis 3 times. A double-pigtail ureteral stent was then placed. Both dogs recovered without complications, with cessation of gross hematuria within 12 hours. Cystoscopic removal of the ureteral stent was performed in dog 1 after 4 months; at that time, the urine sediment contained 5 to 10 RBCs/hpf. In dog 2, urine sediment contained 50 to 75 RBCs/hpf 2 weeks after sclerotherapy, with continued resolution of gross hematuria 8 weeks after sclerotherapy. The owners declined removal of the stent in dog 2. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Findings suggested that povidone iodine sclerotherapy may be an effective renal-sparing treatment for idiopathic renal hematuria in dogs. Further evaluation with longer follow-up times is warranted.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28058949/