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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog treated with cholestyramine for cyanobacteria poisoning

By Kelly A. Rankin et al.·Published in Toxins·2013·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Treatment of Cyanobacterial (Microcystin) Toxicosis Using Oral Cholestyramine: Case Report of a Dog from Montana

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 2.5-year-old spayed female Miniature Australian Shepherd became very sick after swimming in a lake with harmful algae, showing symptoms like vomiting, loss of appetite, and severe depression. Tests revealed liver damage and the presence of a dangerous toxin called microcystin in her system. She was hospitalized for eight days and received supportive care, including fluids and medications. On day five, she was given an oral medication called cholestyramine, which helped her improve rapidly within two days. By 17 days after the exposure, she was back to normal and remained healthy at her follow-up a year later.

People also search for: dog vomiting after swimming · Miniature Australian Shepherd liver damage treatment · cholestyramine for dogs

Abstract

A two and a half year old spayed female Miniature Australian Shepherd presented to a Montana veterinary clinic with acute onset of anorexia, vomiting and depression. Two days prior, the dog was exposed to an algal bloom in a community lake. Within h, the animal became lethargic and anorexic, and progressed to severe depression and vomiting. A complete blood count and serum chemistry panel suggested acute hepatitis, and a severe coagulopathy was noted clinically. Feces from the affected dog were positive for the cyanobacterial biotoxin, microcystin-LA (217 ppb). The dog was hospitalized for eight days. Supportive therapy consisted of fluids, mucosal protectants, vitamins, antibiotics, and nutritional supplements. On day five of hospitalization, a bile acid sequestrant, cholestyramine, was administered orally. Rapid clinical improvement was noted within 48 h of initiating oral cholestyramine therapy. At 17 days post-exposure the dog was clinically normal, and remained clinically normal at re-check, one year post-exposure. To our knowledge, this is the first report of successful treatment of canine cyanobacterial (microcystin) toxicosis. Untreated microcystin intoxication is commonly fatal, and can result in significant liver damage in surviving animals. The clinical success of this case suggests that oral administration of cholestyramine, in combination with supportive therapy, could significantly reduce hospitalization time, cost-of-care and mortality for microcystin-poisoned animals.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/23888515