Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Does exercise cause protein in dog urine after running
By Gary, Anthony T et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2004·Department of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The effects of exercise on urinary albumin excretion in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 26 dogs was tested to see if exercise could cause a specific type of kidney issue called microalbuminuria, which can indicate early kidney disease. The dogs ran on a treadmill for 20 minutes, and their urine was tested before and after exercise. Only 4 out of the 26 dogs showed signs of microalbuminuria, and their urine levels did not increase after exercising. Most dogs (22 out of 26) did not show any signs of this kidney issue at all. This suggests that mild exercise is unlikely to cause kidney problems in healthy dogs.
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Abstract
Persistent microalbuminuria has been shown to be an indicator of glomerular damage associated with early progressive renal disease in people and dogs. In people, transient or reversible microalbuminuria has been shown to occur with exercise. A semi-quantitative test to measure microalbuminuria in the dog recently has become available. The purpose of this study was to determine if mild-to-moderate exercise induced microalbuminuria in the dog. Twenty-six dogs were included in the study after undergoing tests to rule out hyperglycemia, urinary tract infection, azotemia, and a urine protein:creatinine ratio >1. Exercise consisted of 20 minutes of flat treadmill running. Urine samples were collected on 2 separate days before exercise, the morning of exercise, 3 hours postexercise, 7-9 hours postexercise, and each of the 2 mornings after exercise. For 24 of 26 dogs, this procedure was repeated after a minimum 7-day interval between exercise sessions. The canine E.R.D. (early renal disease)-Screen Urine Test (E.R.D.-Screen test) was used to determine semiquantitative urine albumin concentrations. Microalbuminuria-positive samples, as determined by the E.R.D.-Screen test, were further analyzed to determine quantitative albumin concentrations. Four (15%) dogs were microalbuminuria positive. In each of these dogs, microalbuminuria was present both before and after exercise with no quantitative increase in urine albumin concentration postexercise. Twenty-two (85%) dogs were microalbuminuria negative throughout the study and did not develop microalbuminuria at any time after exercise. On a 95% confidence interval, the proportion of dogs that might be expected to develop microalbuminuria after exercise is between 0 and 15%.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14765732/