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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Hydraulic device helps treat urinary leaking in female cats

By Wilson, Kendall E et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2016·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of a percutaneously controlled hydraulic occluder for treatment of refractory urinary incontinence in three female cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

Three female cats were brought in for chronic urinary incontinence, which means they were leaking urine. The vets diagnosed them with a condition called urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence (USMI). To help, they implanted a special device called a hydraulic occluder that can be inflated to control urine flow. After the surgery, all three cats became completely continent, meaning they stopped leaking urine. However, one cat had to have the device removed due to constipation, but even after that, her incontinence improved significantly. Two of the cats remained leak-free for several years after the treatment.

People also search for: cat urinary incontinence treatment · hydraulic occluder for cats · why is my cat leaking urine

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION 3 cats were referred for evaluation of chronic urinary incontinence. CLINICAL FINDINGS A presumptive diagnosis of urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence (USMI) was made in all 3 cats. Preoperatively, incontinence was mild in 1 cat (incontinence during sleep) and moderate to severe (incontinence while awake and at rest) in 2. Structural abnormalities noted during cystoscopy included urethrovestibular junction stenosis (n = 1), vaginal stenosis (1), short urethra (1), and intrapelvic bladder (1). TREATMENT AND OUTCOME All 3 cats were treated by means of implantation of an inflatable silicone hydraulic occluder (HO) via a ventral midline celiotomy. Immediately prior to HO implantation, patients underwent cystoscopy to detect any anatomic abnormalities and confirm the absence of ureteral ectopia. Following surgery, all 3 patients attained complete continence, needing 0 or 1 inflation of the device. Complications included cystoscopy-associated urethral tear (n = 1), constipation (1), stranguria (1), hematuria (2), and urinary tract infection (2). Device explantation was performed 14 weeks after surgery in 1 cat because of postoperative constipation. Constipation persisted and urinary incontinence recurred but was markedly improved following device removal in this cat (leakage of urine only when sleeping at follow-up 29 months after surgery [26 months after device explantation]). At the time of last follow-up, 2 of the 3 cats remained fully continent approximately 3 and 6 years after device implantation. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Findings suggested that implantation of an HO may be a safe and effective long-term treatment for some cats with USMI. Further studies are necessary to evaluate the potential for treatment-related complications and the long-term outcome.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26885598/