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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How antibiotics before cystotomy affect dog urine cultures

By Buote, Nicole J et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2012·Animal Medical Center, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The effect of preoperative antimicrobial administration on culture results in dogs undergoing cystotomy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 41 dogs undergoing surgery to remove bladder stones (cystic calculi) had urine samples tested for infections before and during the procedure. Some dogs received antibiotics before the surgery, while others only got them afterward. The results showed that giving antibiotics before surgery did not change the infection rates or types of bacteria found in the urine. This means that the timing of antibiotic administration didn't affect the outcome for these dogs.

People also search for: dog bladder stones surgery · cystotomy infection treatment · preoperative antibiotics for dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of preoperative antimicrobial administration on culture results in dogs undergoing cystotomy as a treatment for urolithiasis. DESIGN: Prospective controlled study. Animals-41 dogs undergoing cystotomy for cystic calculi removal. PROCEDURES: Urine samples were collected at time of anesthetic induction and during surgery prior to cystotomy, and a mucosal biopsy and culturette swab was collected during surgery from a control group, which received antimicrobials only after surgical culture sample collection, and from an experimental group, which received antimicrobials at the time of anesthetic induction. RESULTS: 17 of 41 patients had positive culture results at anesthetic induction. Twenty of 41 patients had positive results of cultures for the surgical sample. No dogs that had positive results before antimicrobial administration had negative results after antimicrobial administration. There were no significant changes to urinalysis results regardless of group. Calcium monohydrate uroliths were the most common stone removed (24/41), followed by magnesium ammonium phosphate uroliths (11/41). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: There was no difference in culture results (positivity and bacterial type) when antimicrobials were given at anesthetic induction versus after surgical culture sample collection for dogs undergoing cystotomy for cystic calculi removal.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23078564/