Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Puppy with aspiration pneumonia develops hormone imbalance causing
By Martínez, Rocío & Torrente, Carlos·Published in Topics in companion animal medicine·2017·Hospital Clí, Spain·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Syndrome of Inappropriate Antidiuretic Hormone Secretion in a Mini-Breed Puppy Associated With Aspiration Pneumonia.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 3-month-old Prague ratter puppy was brought to the emergency vet for severe lethargy, weakness, coughing, and trouble breathing after struggling with oral deworming. Initial tests showed he had aspiration pneumonia, so he was treated with fluids, antibiotics, and oxygen support. Unfortunately, his condition worsened, leading to seizures and severe low sodium levels. The vet diagnosed him with a rare condition called SIADH (Syndrome of Inappropriate Antidiuretic Hormone Secretion) and treated him with a special saline solution and diuretics. Thankfully, after a week of treatment, the puppy improved and was able to go home.
People also search for: puppy coughing and weakness · aspiration pneumonia treatment in dogs · puppy seizures and low sodium
Abstract
A 3-month-old intact male Prague ratter was presented to the emergency service for evaluation of progressive lethargy, weakness, coughing and labour breathing after an episode of resistance to oral deworming. The patient exhibited depression, increased respiratory effort and cyanosis at initial presentation. Results of first diagnostic work-up (complete blood cell count, biochemistry panel and thoracic x-rays) were all consistent with aspiration pneumonia. The puppy was initially treated with balanced isotonic crystalloids, broad spectrum antibiotics, nebulization with thoracic coupage and was transferred to an infant incubator with a sustained FiO2 of 40-50%. Twenty-four hours after ICU admission the patient's condition suffered a worsening and the dog was orthopneic, severely depressed with episodes of intermittent dysphoria and seizuring. New thoracic radiographs and several samples of blood and urine were collected to go further in the diagnostic workup revealing severe hyponatremia, severe plasma hypotonicity, high natriuresis and metabolic acidosis with a worsening of the radiological pulmonary pattern. Based on these new clinical findings a diagnosis of SIADH was established. Emergency treatment with hypertonic 3% saline solution and loop diuretics was started like a sodium supplement and to inhibit water resorption in renal tubules, thus reducing the volume overload. The goal of this treatment was to achieve a progressive and controlled increase of plasma sodium concentration and promoting the excretion of positive body water imbalance. The patient's condition improved clinically over the following days, treatment was progressively discontinued and the dog was discharged 7 days after admission. To the author's knowledge this is the first report of a puppy younger than 12 weeks with respiratory distress developing SIADH associated to aspiration pneumonia.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29525234/