Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Lung problems in dogs with kidney failure and azotemia
By Le Boedec, K et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2012·Department of Clinical Sciences, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Pulmonary abnormalities in dogs with renal azotemia.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with kidney disease, including those with acute kidney injury and advanced chronic kidney disease, showed more signs of breathing problems compared to healthy dogs. These dogs had specific lung issues, such as abnormal patterns on X-rays and mineralization in lung tissues. However, having these lung problems did not affect their chances of recovery or how long they lived after treatment. This suggests that while kidney disease can lead to respiratory issues in dogs, it doesn't necessarily worsen their overall prognosis.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical signs associated with respiratory tract disease are regularly encountered in people with kidney failure, and have been anecdotally reported in dogs. OBJECTIVES: To compare clinical signs indicative of pulmonary disease, clinicopathologic findings, radiographic abnormalities, and histologic findings in dogs with acute kidney injury (AKI) or International Renal Interest Society Stage 3 or 4 chronic kidney disease (CKD) to nonazotemic dogs. To determine associations between abnormalities indicative of pulmonary disease and outcome in azotemic dogs. ANIMALS: One hundred sixty-seven pet dogs (54 AKI dogs, 50 CKD dogs, 63 nonazotemic control dogs diagnosed with intracranial disease). METHODS: Retrospective cohort study comparing signalment, clinical signs, clinicopathologic variables, prevalence, and severity of pulmonary radiographic patterns, histopathologic findings, and survival times in AKI, CKD, and control dogs. RESULTS: Clinical signs of pulmonary disease were significantly more common in AKI dogs. Prevalence of an alveolar lung pattern was greater in AKI and CKD dogs. Alveolar mineralization was the most common pulmonary histologic lesion in AKI dogs (6 of 8 dogs), with concurrent alveolar concretions or mineralization of pulmonary vessels or bronchioles noted in 1 dog each; mineralization of lung tissues was not noted in control dogs. Neither clinical signs nor presence of an alveolar pattern were associated with likelihood of survival to discharge or median number of days from discharge until death. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Abnormalities indicative of pulmonary disease are more common in azotemic dogs than in control dogs; however, prognosis is not associated with presence of clinical or radiographic pulmonary dysfunction.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22748163/