Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with very high blood chloride levels and weakness diagnosis
By Piperisova, Ida et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2009·College of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: What is your diagnosis? Marked hyperchloremia in a dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 5-year-old neutered male Cavalier King Charles Spaniel was brought in for worsening weakness over three weeks. The dog had been taking potassium citrate capsules to help with previous urinary stones, but tests revealed dangerously high levels of bromide in his system, likely due to a mix-up at the pharmacy where the capsules were made. After stopping the capsules, the dog's neurological symptoms improved quickly. This case highlights the importance of careful medication management and monitoring for potential toxicities.
People also search for: dog weakness treatment · Cavalier King Charles Spaniel bromide toxicity · potassium citrate side effects in dogs
Abstract
A 5-year-old neutered male Cavalier King Charles Spaniel was evaluated for a 3-week history of progressive paresis. The dog had been receiving potassium citrate capsules to acidify urine for the past 2 years because of an earlier history of urolithiasis. Results of neurologic examination, spinal cord radiography, and magnetic resonance imaging of the skull and spinal cord revealed no lesions that could have accounted for the neurologic signs. The main abnormalities on a clinical chemistry profile were marked hyperchloremia (179 mmol/L, reference interval 108-122 mmol/L) and an anion gap of -50.4 mmol/L (reference interval 16.3-28.6 mmol/L). Because of the severe hyperchloremia, serum bromide concentration was measured (400 mg/dL; toxic concentration >150 mg/dL; some dogs may tolerate up to 300 mg/dL). Analysis of the potassium citrate capsules, which had been compounded at a local pharmacy, yielded a mean bromide concentration of 239 mg/capsule. Administration of the capsules was discontinued and there was rapid resolution of the dog's neurologic signs. This case of extreme bromide toxicity, which apparently resulted from inadvertent use of bromide instead of citrate at the pharmacy, illustrates the importance of knowing common interferents with analyte methodologies and of pursing logical additional diagnostic tests based on clinical and laboratory evidence, even when a patient's history appears to rule out a potential etiology.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19392764/