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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog treated successfully after lisdexamfetamine poisoning with low

By Kawasaki, Minae & Snead, Elisabeth·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2025·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Successful management of lisdexamfetamine intoxication in a dog despite complications of hypoglycemia and rhabdomyolysis.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A 15-year-old beagle-cross was brought to the vet after accidentally eating a large amount of the medication lisdexamfetamine, which caused serious symptoms like muscle tremors, rapid heart rate, and gastrointestinal issues. Initial treatments didn't fully help, but the dog stabilized after receiving a constant infusion of sedatives and IV fluids with sugar. After 44 hours of hospitalization, the dog was discharged and showed no lasting effects from the incident. A week later, it was back to normal with no signs of kidney damage or other complications.

People also search for: dog lisdexamfetamine poisoning treatment · beagle muscle tremors · dog IV fluids recovery

Abstract

A 15-year-old castrated male beagle-cross dog was presented with neuromuscular, cardiovascular, and gastrointestinal signs 7 h after accidental ingestion of a toxic dose (33 mg/kg) of the amphetamine lisdexamfetamine dimesylate. Clinical and clinicopathological abnormalities noted included dysphoria, mydriasis, hyperesthesia, muscle tremors, tachycardia, tachypnea, hyperthermia, hematochezia, mild hypoglycemia, hemoconcentration, and metabolic acidosis. Initial treatment with intravenous (IV) acepromazine, butorphanol, methocarbamol, and rectal cyproheptadine, along with IV fluids with 5% dextrose added, was inadequate to control clinical signs. The dog was stabilized effectively following administration of IV constant-rate infusions (CRIs) of dexmedetomidine (1 to 3 μg/kg per hour) and butorphanol (0.2 mg/kg per hour). The dog was maintained on this CRI protocol for 20 h and weaned off without redeveloping neuromuscular and cardiovascular signs. Serum biochemical analysis and urinalysis at that time revealed marked elevation of creatine kinase (100-fold), mild to moderate elevation of liver enzymes (ALP: 2.4-fold, ALT: 9.5-fold, GLDH: 4-fold), and the presence of myoglobinuria, indicative of rhabdomyolysis and possible concurrent hepatic injury. The animal recovered with supportive care and was discharged 44 h after presentation. One week after discharge, the dog was clinically normal and serum biochemical analysis and urinalysis confirmed resolution of rhabdomyolysis. No evidence of kidney failure secondary to the rhabdomyolysis was noted. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of survival following lisdexamfetamine intoxication in a dog. Clinical signs resolved completely with supportive and symptomatic therapies mainly consisting of IV fluid therapy and sedative administration. There were no long-term complications reported. Key clinical message: Aggressive medical therapies, including IV CRIs of dexmedetomidine and butorphanol, in addition to IV fluids, were effective for managing a dog with severe lisdexamfetamine intoxication. The dog recovered uneventfully following 44 h of hospitalization, with no evidence of long-term complications secondary to the rhabdomyolysis associated with the toxicosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41030426/