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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Male miniature dachshunds with urine-filled prostate cysts causing

By McGill, Jennifer et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2018·From the Department of Small Animal Clinical Science (K.M.T.M., United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Urine-Filled Large Prostatic Cystic Structure in Two Unrelated Male Miniature Dachshunds.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 1-year-old male miniature dachshund was taken to the vet because he was trying to urinate but couldn't, and he was also urinating at night. The vet found a fluid-filled cyst near his bladder and diagnosed him with a prostatic cyst. After surgery to remove it, the cyst returned after 12 weeks, and the dog had the same issues again. A second 7-month-old male miniature dachshund had similar problems and underwent surgery as well, but his cyst also came back within three weeks. Sadly, both dogs had to be euthanized due to the recurring symptoms.

People also search for: dog urinating problems · miniature dachshund prostatic cyst · dog urinary issues treatment

Abstract

A 1 yr old intact male miniature dachshund presented for posturing to urinate without voiding and nocturia. Physical examination revealed congenital reproductive abnormalities and a fluid-filled structure caudal to the urinary bladder. The dog was diagnosed with a prostatic cyst and underwent an exploratory laparotomy with an attempt to remove the cyst. Twelve weeks later, the dog returned with recurring clinical signs, and the cyst was found to have returned back to its original size. A second intact male miniature dachshund presented at 7 mo of age for stranguria. Physical examination revealed congenital reproductive abnormalities and a fluid-filled structure on rectal palpation, much like the first dog. The dog was diagnosed with a prostatic cyst and underwent an exploratory laparotomy. An attempt was made to close communication between the prostate and cyst. The dog re-presented 3 wk later for recurrence of clinical signs, and the prostatic cyst was found to have increased in size. Both dogs were euthanized because of recurrence of clinical signs. This report describes the presence of prostatic cysts in two young dogs with congenital abnormalities of the genital and reproductive tracts and the similarities seen in human boys diagnosed with prostatic utricles.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30272475/