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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Surgery to fix vaginal narrowing in dogs with repeated urinary

By Kieves, Nina R et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2011·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Vaginal resection and anastomosis for treatment of vestibulovaginal stenosis in 4 dogs with recurrent urinary tract infections.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Four dogs were brought in for recurrent urinary tract infections, and three of them were also experiencing urinary incontinence. After examining them, the vet found a condition called vestibulovaginal stenosis, which was confirmed through imaging tests. All dogs underwent surgery to remove the affected area and reconnect the vaginal tissue. Three dogs showed complete recovery from their symptoms, while one dog had complications that required additional surgery. Ultimately, all dogs were free of urinary tract infections after follow-up visits 6 to 8 months later.

People also search for: dog urinary tract infection treatment · dog urinary incontinence surgery · vestibulovaginal stenosis in dogs

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION-4 dogs were evaluated because of recurrent urinary tract infections. CLINICAL FINDINGS-All dogs had recurrent urinary tract infections and similar clinical signs; 3 dogs had urinary incontinence. Digital vaginal examination revealed vestibulovaginal stenosis in all dogs, which was confirmed by results of contrast vaginourethrography. From image measurements, the vestibulovaginal ratio (ratio of the height of the vestibulovaginal junction to the maximum height of the vagina on a lateral vaginourethrogram) was calculated for each dog. Three dogs had severe stenosis (vestibulovaginal ratio, < 0.20; severe stenosis is defined as a vestibulovaginal ratio < 0.20), whereas the fourth dog had moderate stenosis (vestibulovaginal ratio, 0.24; ratio range for moderate stenosis is 0.20 to 0.25). TREATMENT AND OUTCOME-All dogs were anesthetized for surgical correction of the vestibulovaginal stenosis. Vaginal resection and anastomosis of the stenosis was performed in all 4 dogs, with 1 dog also undergoing episioplasty. Complete resolution of clinical signs was apparent in 3 dogs; 1 dog had postoperative complications including pollakiuria and stranguria, which resulted in rectal and vaginal prolapse. This dog underwent ovariohysterectomy, after which clinical signs resolved. All dogs had resolution of urinary tract infections at the time of follow-up (6 to 8 months after surgery). CLINICAL RELEVANCE-Resection and anastomosis may resolve recurrent urinary tract infections in dogs with severe or moderate vestibulovaginal stenosis. Episiotomy was not necessary for success of surgical treatment, and overall, that procedure increased morbidity, the severity of intraoperative hemorrhage, and duration of surgery.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21961638/