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Diseases of the Urinary System. Small Animal and Caged Bird Medicine Dr. Randy Ackman. Urinary System. Urinary System Kidneys (paired) Ureters (paired) Bladder Urethra Os penis (dog). Urinary System. Functions Concentrate nitrogenous waste RBC production Water Electrolyte balance
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Diseases of the Urinary System Small Animal and Caged Bird Medicine Dr. Randy Ackman
Urinary System • Urinary System • Kidneys (paired) • Ureters (paired) • Bladder • Urethra • Os penis (dog)
Urinary System • Functions • Concentrate nitrogenous waste • RBC production • Water Electrolyte balance • Regulate Blood pressure • Regulates pH of plasma
Urinary System • Nephron • Functional unit of the kidney • Glomerulus • Capillary • Bowman’s Capsule • Proximal tubules • Loop of Henle • Distal tubule • Collecting tubule
Defense Mechanism of Urinary System • Acidic pH • Inhibits growth of bacteria • Urethral and ureter peristalsis • Urination • Glycoaminoglycans protect surface mucosa
Diseases of the Urinary System • Cystitis (bacterial) • Inflammation of the urinary bladder • Result of ascending infection • More frequent in females • Recurring infections in male • Prostrate may be source
Cystitis (bacterial) • Signs and symptoms • Febrile +/- • Hematuria • Dysuria • Small quantities • Increased frequency • Inappropriate places • Pain on urination • Licking of urethral region • Cloudy or abnormal odor color of urine
Cystitis (bacterial) • Methods of urine collection • Voided free catch • Ok for urinalysis not for C & S • Expressed • Ok for urinalysis, but may have iatrogenic blood • Not for C& S • Catheter • Sterile technique • Ok for urinalysis and C & S • Cystocentesis • Ok for urinalysis and C & S (ideal)
Cystitis (bacterial) • Diagnosis • Urinalysis • Elevated pH • + leukocytes • + blood • Culture and Sensitivity • Sediment • RBC’s • WBC’s • Bacteria
Cystitis (bacterial) • Treatment • Based on C & S (ideal) • Empirical antibiotics • Those that reach adequate urine concentrations • Ampicillin, Amoxicillin, Fluoroquinolones, Sulfas, Cephalexin • Treat 10 days to 2 weeks • Poor owner compliance greatest reason for resistance and ineffective therapy
Idiopathic (Interstitial) Cystitis • AKA • FUS –Feline urologic syndrome • FLUTD- Feline Lower Urinary Tract Disease • Unsure etiology • Possibly Viral • Difficult to distinguish from bacterial cystitis • C & S negative • Lack of bacteruria
Interstitial Cystitis • Often self limiting in cats • Can be controlled without antibiotics • But usually treated as bacterial cystitis • Hematuria • Dysuria • Inappropriate urination
Interstitial Cystitis • Diagnosis • Urinalysis • Similar to bacterial • C+S • Negative for bacteria • Sediment • RBC’s • WBC’s • Bacteria absent
Interstitial Cystitis • Therapy • Diet changes • Increase volume of urine • Amitriptyline • Reduces pain and discomfort • May reoccur
Feline Urethral Plugs • Plugged tomcats • Medical emergency • Severe • Causes • Neutered males most likely • Can occur in females and intact males • Urethral Plug • Mucus and crystalline matrix blocked narrowed distal urethra
Feline Urethral Plugs • Symptoms • Inability to urinate despite frequent attempts • Lethargic • Distended bladder • Painful abdomen • Azotemia • ECG abnormalities • Comatose • hyperkalemia • Death • If not corrected 2-4 days
http://www.thepetcenter.com/exa/uo.html • Treatment • Sedation – careful dosing if animal is depressed • Sterile technique • Pass urethral catheter • Massage distal urethra (rarely works) • Retropulse plug with saline • Diuresis • Fluid therapy to dilute crystalline material • Antibiotics
Feline Urethral Plug • Dietary change • Decrease acidity of urine • Prevents formation of crystalline material • c/d, s/d • OTC • “for urinary tract health” • Urine acidifiers • Antibiotics
Uroliths • Bladder Stones • Identified by there chemical composition of urolith • Struvite – Magnesium amonium phosphate • Most common • Form in alkaline urine • Dissolution with s/d • Calcium oxalate • High calcium • Surgery only treatment • u/d prevents formation
Uroliths • Urates • Common in Dalmatians • Allopurinol • Decreases uric acid production • u/d used to prevent and dissolve
http://www.thepetcenter.com/sur/bladderstone.html • Cystotomy • Surgical excision of bladder stones • Check urethral patency • Retrograde flushing through catheter, as catheter is removed
Abrupt decrease in glomerular filtration Causes Toxins Ethylene glycol Plants Lilly, Rhubarb etc Drugs Aminoglycosides Sulfanomides Cephalsporins Acetaminophen Causes continued Hypotension Shock Immune mediated Heavy metals Acute Renal Faliure
Acute Renal Failure • Decreased glomerular filtration results in • Azotemia • Renal increased BUN and creatinine • Oliguria • Little urine production • Anuria • No urine production • Polyuria • Increased urine production
Acute Renal Failure • Painful kidneys • Vomiting • Dehydration • Anorexia
Acute Renal Failure • Diagnosis • Urinalysis • Low specific gravity • Sediment • Casts • Depends on initiating factor • Elevated BUN, creatinine, PCV, potassium and phosphorous
Acute Renal Failure • Therapy • IV fluids • Isotonic saline • Eliminate toxin or drug • Prevent uremic gastritis • Antiemtics (Reglan) • Protectants (sucralfate) • Anti-histamine (Cimetidine)
Acute Renal Failure • Treatment • Sodium bicarbonate if acidotic • Diuretics • Furosemide • Dopamine • Mannitol • Must get anuric animals to urinate • May get through episode but persistent kidney damage persists • Guarded prognosis
Chronic Renal Faliure • Common in older pets • Irreversible decline in nephron function • Kidneys may compensate until 2/3 to 3/4 nonfunctional nephrons • Clinical signs • Insidious onset • Congenital or hereditary predisposition
Clinical Signs Anorexia Weight loss Vomiting Constipation Dehydration PU/PD Stomatitis Clinical Signs Hypertension Lethargy Anemia Decreased erythropoietin Hyperphosphatemia Proteiunuria Hypokalemia Azotemia Chronic Renal Failure
Chronic Renal Failure • Treatment • Not a cure • Slow progression of disease • IV or SQ fluids • Maintain hydration and electrolytes • Diuresis – remove accumulating wastes • Antibiotics if necessary • Potassium supplementation • GI protectnats • Metocloprmide, cimetidine, surcalfate
Chronic Renal Failure • Treatment • ACE inhibitors – reduce renal hypertension • Dietary change • k/d, u/d • Low protein, high quality protein (more important) • Anabolic steroids • Erythropoietin
Chronic Renal Failure • Important Points • Irreversible • Home treatment may be required • Point where eating is more important than what they eat
Urinary Incontinence • Loss of voluntary control of micturition or urination • Neurogenic • Result of spinal cord disease • Nonneurogenic • Ectopic ureters • Estrogen deficiency – OHE animals • Juvenile - submissive
Urinary Incontinence • Diagnosis • Urination while sleeping, walking • Urinalysis • Normal • R/O • Urinary disease • Metabolic or endocrine disease
Urinary Incontinence • Therapy • DES – diethylstilbestrol • Daily initially • Weekly maintenance • Monitor CBC for bone marrow suppression • PPA – Phenylpropanolamine • Antihistamine • Increase urethral sphincter tone • Daily dosing BID to TID