Dogs and Cats 21 Flashcards

1
Q

renal proteinuria what are the main types, causes and how to know

A
  • transient
  • Persistent renal proteinuria and other urinalysis results
    ○ Glomerular disease
    § Often marked proteinuria (UPC> 2.0)
    ○ Tubular disease
    § Possibly also glucosuria, acidosis, electrolyte imbalances
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2
Q

When to suspect glomerulopathes and the histopathological classification

A

When to suspect glomerulopathies
- Persistent renal proteinuria (UPC elevation)
- Hypoalbuminaemia
- Hypercholesterolaemia
- Persistent hypertension
- Low USG without explanation
- Normal USG but azotaemia in a hydrated animal - uncommon
Histopathological classification: glomerular disease
- Examples of subgroups recognized are:
○ Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis - more common in dogs
○ Membranous nephropathy
○ Amyloidosis - more common especially in cats

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3
Q

Glomerular disease primary and secondary causes

A
- Primary 
○ Familial congenital 
- Secondary 
○ Infectious
○ Immune-mediated
○ Idiopathic 
○ Neoplastic
○ Miscellaneous
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4
Q

Familial renal disease suspicion and approach

A
  • Suspect familial renal disease if
    ○ Pet is purebred - sharpies, British shorthair
    ○ Pet is adolescent or young adult
    ○ Siblings/close relatives are showing similar signs
  • Approach
    ○ Screening tests (breed associations)
    ○ Search genetic disease database;
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5
Q

Secondary glomerulopathies what are the 4 main causes

A
  • Caused by infection
    ○ Dogs: bacteria causing pyelonephritis, prostatitis, orchitis
  • Caused by inflammation
    ○ Dermatitis, periodontal disease, SLE
  • Caused by neoplasia
    ○ Lymphoma, mastocytosis or histiocytic disease
  • Miscellaneous causes
    ○ Overvaccination, Trimethoprim sulfonamide
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6
Q

Glomerulopathies investigation what does it involve

A
  • Different degree of work-up depending on patient criteria
  • Patients are categorised in 3 tiers according to:
    ○ Persistent renal proteinuria
    ○ Hypoalbuminaemia
    ○ Azotaemia
    ○ Hypertension and sequelae
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7
Q

What are the potential diagnostic tests for a glomerulopathy and when is work up indicated

A
- Tests 
○ Renal biopsy
○ Genetic tests
○ Antithrombin III measurement
○ Abdominal ultrasound, thoracic radiographs
○ Haematology, Biochemistry(Serology)
○ Blood pressure
○ Urinalysis, UPC, Culture
- Tests may be essential, recommended or potentially helpful
- If indicated, work up for:
○ Hypoalbuminaemia
○ Azotaemia
○ Hypertension
○ Infectious diseases
○ Other sequelae
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8
Q

when to do a renal biopsy and when not to

A
- Do it (well prepared):
○ Disease unresponsive to standard care
○ Severe proteinuria (UPC > 3.5)
○ No overt contraindications
- Leave it:
○ IRIS stage 4 renal disease
○ Biopsy unlikely to change treatment plan
○ Contraindications
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9
Q

Nephrotic syndrome what is it a combination of and indication of

A
  • Combination of
    ○ Hypoalbuminaemia
    ○ Hypercholesterolaemia
    ○ Proteinuria
    ○ Extracellular fluid accumulation (e.g. ascites)
  • Indicator of severe disease and associated with poor prognosis
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10
Q

Treatment of glomerular disease what are the main factors that need to be managed

A
  • Factors to be managed
    ○ Protein loss
    § Weight loss, hypercoagulability, hypercholesterolaemia, ascites
    ○ Underlying disease
    § Inflammation, immune-complex deposition
    ○ Progression of renal disease
    § Hypertension, azotaemia
  • Management may be supportive, or specifically targeting the underlying disease
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11
Q

What are the 4 main things involved in treatment of glomerular disease

A

1) Supportive management of blood pressure and proteinuria
2) further supportive treatment
3) further supportive treatment in selected patients
4) specific treatment = treat underlying disease and or immunosuppressive treatment

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12
Q

Supportive management of blood pressure and proteinuria in the treatment of glomerular disease what drugs involved and what do they do

A

○ ACE-inhibitor, e.g. benazepril
§ Less filtration pressure in glomerulus due to vasodilation of efferent arteriole
§ May cause reduction in renal blood flow and GFR - RISK
□ Monitoring of renal function after start
○ Further blood pressure control
§ Calcium channel blocker, e.g. amlodipine
§ Angiotensin receptor blocker, e.g. Telmisartan

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13
Q

Further supportive treatments in teh treatment of glomerular disease what are the 2 main things involved and what else need to do

A

○ Protein-restricted diet
§ O3 fatty acid supplement - anti-inflammatory as well
○ Anticoagulants
§ Antithrombin III - if albumin is lost this is lost as well
□ If lose hypercoagulable -> predispose to blood cot
§ Aspirin or Clopidogrel
○ Stage and treat azotaemic dogs/cats

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14
Q

What are the 3 main further supprotive treatments that may be needed in treating glomerular disease in selected patients

A

1) Drainage of ascites
§ Only recommended in cases with ascites causing respiratory distress
2) Diuretics
§ Only recommended in selected cases with ascites
§ Potassium sparing ones - spirolactone
3) IV fluid therapy
§ Crystalloids: avoid fluid overload
§ Colloids: Only in patients with hypotension that does not respond to crystalloids

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15
Q

Specific treatment (treating underlying disease or immunosuppresives) for glomerular disease when to do

A

○ Immunosuppressive treatment –yes or no?
§ In 50% of dogs, glomerulopathies are associated with immune-complex deposition
§ Possible benefit for Immunosuppressives
§ Immunosuppressives are not indicated in all dogs, e.g.
□ No benefit in many genetic disorders
□ No benefit in amyloidosis

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16
Q

Specific treatment (treating underlying disease or immunosuppresives) for glomerular disease current treatment guidelines

A
§ Depend progression of disease
§ Rapid
□ Prednisolone and/or
□ Mycophenolate mofetil, or
□ Cyclophosphamide
§ Slow - in addition to above
□ Azathioprine
□ Cyclosporine
□ Chlorambucil
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17
Q

What are the 5 main treatment goals in treating glomerular disease and treat same for dog and cats?

A
  1. UPC:WNL or at least 50% reduction of UPC
  2. Blood pressure controlled
  3. No hyperkalaemia
  4. Stabilise azotaemia
  5. No sequelae
    Cats are not dogs
    - Causes of glomerulonephritis are less well established in cats.
    - Very limited studies about therapy in cats.
    - Thus, specific treatment guidelines are for DOGS ONLY.
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18
Q

Monitoring glomerular disease what frequency and what monitoring

A
  • 1 week –1 month –3 months
  • Appetite, Urination
  • Physical components
    ○ Body weight, BCS
    ○ Physical examination changes
  • Blood pressure
  • Clinicopathological
    ○ UA and UPC, +-Ucult
    ○ PO4, K, Na, Ca, urea, crea, cholesterol, albumin, CBC
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19
Q

Prognosis for glomerular disease

A
  • Regression is possible
  • Poor prognostic indicators:
    ○ Azotaemia (10-45 days median survival)
    ○ Nephrotic syndrome (51 d vs 605 d median survival)
  • Although MST with NS is short, survival >7 years has been reported
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20
Q

What is the blood supple and lymphatic drainage from the bladder

A
- Caudal vesicular artery:
○ Major supply
§ Arises from uterine(female )or prostatic (male) branches of the internal pudendal
- Cranial vesicular artery:
○ Terminal end of umbilical
○ Supplies cranial end of bladder.
- Venous drainage: internal pudendal veins.
- Lymphatic drainage:
○ Hypogastric
○ Sublumbar
○ Medial iliac lymph nodes
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21
Q

Bladder innervation what are the 3 main ones and the function

A
  • α adrenergic receptors in the smooth muscle of the bladder neck and urethra
    1) Sympathetic innervation
    ○ Hypogastric nerves(L4-L6)
    ○ Storage (filling): detrusor relaxation & bladder neck/ urethral contraction - MAINTAIN CONTINENCE
    2) Parasympathetic innervation
    ○ Pelvic & Pudendal nerves(S1-S3)
    ○ Voiding: detrusor contraction, relaxation of the bladder neck & urethra
    3) Somatic innervation: -
    ○ Pudendal nerve(S1-S3)
    ○ Voluntary control of urination
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22
Q

Storage stage of the bladder what innervation and function is involved

A
  • Smooth mm at vesicular-uretheral junction maintained in contraction for storage (Except during micturition):
    ○ Mediated by α-adrenergic stimulation via the hypogastric nerve
    ○ B-receptor stimulation via the hypogastric nerve relaxes the detrusor simultaneously
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23
Q

Voiding of the bladder what innervation and function is involved

A
  • As bladder nears capacity, stretch receptors are activated:
  • Results in parasympathetic stimulus to institute reflex micturition
  • Depresses sympathetic outflow in the Hypogastric n and brainstem (pons-micturition centre)
  • Parasympathetic nerve supply originates in pontine centre and in the sacral spinal cord(S1-3):
  • Stimulates and maintains detrusor contraction via the Pelvic nerve
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24
Q

Urethral anatomy where extends and anatomy in male dog and cat

A
  • Extends from the trigone to the urethral meatus
  • Lined by transitional epithelium
  • Male dog
    ○ Preprostatic
    ○ Prostatic (within prostate)
    ○ Membranous/cavernous
    ○ Smooth muscle
    § Longitudinal, runs length of the urethra
    ○ Straited muscle - distal 2/3rds
  • Male cat
    ○ More distinct preprostatic urethra
    ○ Short prostatic section
    ○ Membranous (within pelvis)
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25
Q

Urethral anatomy in female dogs and cats

A
  • Female dogs
    ○ Urethra shorter and wider
    ○ Smooth muscle: outer and inner longitudinal and middle circular, runs length of urethra
    ○ Straited muscle: distal 1/3
    ○ OHE increases collagen and decreases smooth muscle in the proximal urethra - PREDISPOSE
  • Female cats
    ○ C/w female dogs
    § Lumen smaller
    § Less circular smooth muscle and elastic fibres
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26
Q

Blood supply and innervation to the urethral in male and female

A
Blood supply
- Female
○ Vaginal arteries from the urogenital artery 
- Male 
○ Prostatic: prostatic artery 
○ Membranous/cavernous: urethral branches of pudendal, urethral or prostatic, urethral bulb artery 
Innervation
- Striated muscle
○ External urethral sphincter
○ Pudendal nerve
- Smooth muscle
○ Internal urethral sphincter 
○ Parasympathetic: pelvic nerve
○ Sympathetic: (alpha adrenergic) hypogastric nerve
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27
Q

Healing of the bladder, how long does it take

A
  • Bladder undergoes rapid healing
    ○ Mucosal defects heal within 5 days
    ○ Full thickness incisions regain 100% normal tissue strength in 14-21 days
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28
Q

what are the 7 main indications for bladder surgery

A
  1. Urolithiasis
  2. Trauma
  3. Neoplasia
  4. Ectopic ureter surgery
  5. Urachal diverticulum
  6. Bladder biopsy
  7. Urinary diversion - cystotomy tubes
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29
Q

Cystotomy what is it and what need to do in preparation -EXAM

A
  • Midline celiotomy -> if removing uroliths than caudal laparotomy is appropriate
    Preparation
  • Stay sutures
    ○ In the apex of the bladder (cranial traction)
    ○ Lateral to the incision
  • Pack off the bladder - moistened lap sponges - CLEAN CONTAMINATED SURGERY
  • Empty the bladder
    ○ Catheter
    ○ Cystocentesis/suction
    ○ Empty bladder after incision via suction
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30
Q

Cystotmy what are the 2 main approaches, which better and how to open bladder -EXAM

A

○ Dorsal or ventral approach
§ No issues with adhesions
§ Ventral approach
□ Improved exposure of trigone (visualisation of ureteral orifices)
□ Decrease risk of iatrogenic urethral damage than dorsal approach
□ Avoids retroflexion and 180 degree kinking of urethra than dorsal
○ Choose avascular region in ventral midline
○ Stab incision with 15 or 11 blade
○ Extend with Metzenbaum scissors
○ Make incision from apex to trigone region

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31
Q

Cystotomy closure suture material and what is important

A

○ Rapid healing occurs with mucosal defects epithelialize in < 5days
○ Accurate needle placement through the submucosa is the most important aspect of closure
○ Suture material
- synthetic monofilament absorbable (PDS 3/0-5/0)
- simple continuous or interrupted
§ Ideally do NOT penetrate lumen
§ Engage submucosa only: - NO KNOTS WITHIN LUMEN

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32
Q

What is important to consider with closing bladder and synthetic sutures and which types degrade with what

A

□ Absorbed via hydrolysis
® Hydrolysis is more rapid in urine, particularly when infected
® Sutures with a glycolide component degrade more rapidly in a ALKALINE environment (when infected)
® Sutures with dioxanone component degrade more rapidly in an acid environment
® Short acting absorbable may not last long enough for healing infected urine

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33
Q

Urteral ectopia what are the 2 main types which species common in and what does this influence

A

Morphologic types
1. Intramural
○ Ureter enter bladder wall at a normal location
○ Runs sub-mucosal empty into the urogenital tract distal to the trigone
○ Most common form in dogs
2. Extramural
○ Ureter by-passes bladder completely
○ Inserts distal to the trigone
○ Most common form in cats
- Morphology influences method of correction

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34
Q

Surgical correction for intra-mural ectopic ureters what are the 2 main options and which recommended

A

1) Neourecterostomy - create a new opening - SPECIALIST LEVEL SURGERY
2) Cystoscopic-guided LASER ablation - RECOMMENDED - more minimally invasive
§ Catheterise the ureter and laser the section away

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35
Q

What is the surgical correction for extra-mural ectopic ureters and how occur

A

○ Ureteroneocystostomy
§ Re-implantation of the ureter from the abnormal insertion point into the bladder lumen proximal to the trigone
□ Difficult due to small size of ureters
§ Ventral cystotomy
§ Stab incision
§ Passage of ureter through bladder wall
§ Spatulation
§ Suturing with 5/0 - 6/0 suture

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36
Q

Surgical outcome of ectopic ureter surgical and what need to do

A
  • Persistent incontinence is common
    ○ 30-70%
    ○ Concomitant functional bladder/urethral abnormalities (huskies)
    ○ USMI
    ○ Urethral pressure profilometry pre-op may be predictive (where available)
    ○ Address this problem at index surgery
    ○ Communicate and discuss with owners beforehand
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37
Q

Urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence predisposing factors

A
  • Urethral tone
  • Bladder neck position - if intrapelvic bladders
  • Urethral length
  • Neuter status
  • Body size
  • Breed
  • Tail docking
  • Obesity
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38
Q

Urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence surgical treatment when used what are the 3 main things targeting and techniques used

A

only if adverse effects or refractory to medical management
Surgical targeting ->
1) bladder neck position -> advance bladder neck into abdominal pressure zone
§ Use colposuspension or urethrocystopexy/urethropexy
2) Increase functional length of the urethra
§ Colposuspension
§ Urethral lengthening
§ Urethrocytstopexy/ urethropexy
3) Increase static resistance via reduction in urethral diameter - what we are moving towards
§ Submucosal injections
§ Artificial urethral sphincters (AUS)

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39
Q

What are the 3 main surgical treatments for urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence

A

1) colposuspensio
2) endoscopic transmucosal infection - good
3) hydraulic occlusion - good

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40
Q

Colposuspension what is it used for, what is involved and outcomes

A

Urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence surgical treatment
§ Sutures vaginal tissue to pubic brim which -> creates sling to put pressure on urethra
□ Advances bladder neck and proximal urethra into abdominal pressure zone
□ Increases functional urethra length
□ Compression of urethra between vagina and pubis
§ Outcomes
□ Cure 54%, improvement 36%, fail 9%
□ Complications 15%
® Dyssunergia
® Infection
® Recurrence - suture breakdown
® May require adjuvant medical

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41
Q

Endoscopic transmucosal infection what is it used for, outcomes and what use

A

Urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence surgical treatment
§ Restoration of continence 2-28 months in 36% -> can go back and redo due to collagen breakdown
§ Second treatment 4-25months in 41%
§ Failure mechanism - mucosa erosion and loss of agent
§ USE - glutaraldehyde cross linked bovine collagen
□ Retreatment in 30%
□ No complications

42
Q

Hydraulic occulsion what used for what done and when is continence achieved

A

Urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence surgical treatment
§ Open surgical procedure but relatively straight forward
§ Device placed around pelvic urethra to add pressure and help remain continent
§ SC access port used to inject small volumes of saline -> can also remove if put in too much
§ 3-4 weeks until continence achieved

43
Q

Options for urolithasis treatment

A

1) Medical dissolution possible ○ Struvite, urate, cystine
2) surgical
- cystotomy - most common
- Alternative methods
○ Laparoscopic assisted cystotomy
○ Laser lithotripsy via cystoscopy
3) Care with urinary diets post-op
○ Protein restriction may delay healing

44
Q

What are the 8 steps in a cystotomy for urolithiasis

A
  1. Visual inspection and palpation of entire mucosal lining
  2. Check for urachal diverticulum
  3. Catheter flush (urethral floss) -> retrograde flush through bladder out the urethra -> TO ENSURE WHOLE OF LOWER URINARY TRACT HAS NO STONES LEFT
  4. Collect samples for C and S
    ○ Bladder wall mucosa
    ○ Urolith (crushed)
  5. Submit uroliths for composition analysis
  6. Radiograph post-surgery to ensure all calculi removed - IMPORTANT
  7. Urethral FLOSS
  8. Check for urachal diverticulum
45
Q

Urethral surgery what are the main indications and what if cannot be repaired

A
  • Obstruction - uroliths, neoplasia, stricture
  • Trauma: rupture, perforation, avulsion
  • If urethral abnormalities cannot be repaired, a urethrostomy proximal to the site of the lesion can be considered
46
Q

Urethrotomy what is it, when performed, what should always attempt before hand and how

A
  • Temporary opening of the urethra
  • Performed mainly to remove uroliths that can’t be shifted or to biopsy a lesion
  • Always attempt urohydropulsion - IMPORTANT
    ○ Usually effective
    ○ Cystotomy is always preferable to urethrotomy
    ○ Loss of sterile lubricant
    ○ Largest possible catheter diameter
    ○ Care with bladder overdistention
47
Q

Urethrotomy location which preferred and risks

A
  • Location
    ○ Penile
    ○ Scrotal
    ○ Prescrotal: preferred position - near the os penis
    ○ Perineal
  • Post-operative haemorrhage and urine scald are temporary issues
  • Risk of post-operative stricture:
    ○ Uncommon
    ○ More likely if urethra severely traumatised
48
Q

Urethrotomy steps

A

○ Dorsal recumbency
○ Place a catheter as far as possible into the urethra
○ Ventral midline incision and lateralize retractor penis muscle
○ Use a 15-scapel blade to incise into the urethra
○ Cold saline to aid haemostasis
○ The urethrotomy can be allowed to heal via 2nd intention
○ Expect post-op bleeding

49
Q

Perineal urethrotomy what is different and therefore what need to consider

A

○ Urethra is much deeper
○ Need to divide the bulbospongiosus muscles to expose the corpus spongiusum
○ After obstruction relieved, pass catheter normo and antegrade to exclude other obstructions
○ Use primary closure of the urethra to avoid cellulitis

50
Q

Closure of urethrotomy what involved

A

○ Simple interrupted sutures of 4-6/0 monofilament absorbable
○ Close urethral mucosa and tunica albuginea
○ Close over a catheter
○ Secondary intention closure is preferable for cases where the mucosa is damaged

51
Q

Urethrostomy site, what doing and indications

A
  • Sites: similar to urethrotomies
  • Permanent opening of the urethra
  • Indications
    ○ Recurrent obstructive calculi, which cannot be managed medically
    ○ Immoveable calculi
    ○ Salvage surgery for trauma or stricture
    ○ Neoplasia (performed proximal to site of neoplasia)
52
Q

Urethrostomy perferred locations in cats and dogs and why

A
  • Cats: perineal, subpubic/transpelvic and prepubic
  • Dogs: scrotal is preferred
    ○ Urethra wider and more superficial
    ○ Less cavernous tissue - reduced haemorrhage
    ○ Reduce scalding post-operatively (hindlimbs and perineal)
53
Q

Scrotal urethrostomy what is involved, steps and closure

A

○ Castration and scrotal ablation
○ Place catheter is possible
○ Dissect subcutaneous tissue and retract retractor penis
○ Can place atraumatic forceps across both ends of urethra
○ Use 15 blade to incise urethra, 2.5-4cm incision
○ Close urethral mucosa to skin
○ Post-operative haemorrhage is reduced with continuous closure vs interrupted

54
Q

Prescortal and perineal urethrostomy in dogs technique, what isn’t present and which should be avoided

A

○ Technique as for urethrotomy but suture urethral mucosa to the skin
○ Retractor penis muscle isn’t present in the perineal location
○ In dogs - perineal urethrostomy should be avoided is possible
§ Increased risk of infection
§ Increased urine scalding
§ Increased peri and post-op haemorrhage

55
Q

Perineal urethrostomy in cats indications and surgical technique

A

○ Indications
§ Recurrent urinary tract infections, previous catheterisation leading to stricture, neoplasia, obstruction
○ Surgical technique
§ Castration and penile amputation are performed
§ A new stroma is created on the perineum
§ Critical to dissect and free urethra proximal to bulbourethral glands to minimise tension

56
Q

Perineal urethrostomy in cats post operative care

A

§ Shredded paper rather than a litter tray
§ Avoid a urethral catheter
§ Use a buster collar, consider hobbles
§ Remove stitches in 10-14 days under heavy sedation/GA

57
Q

Perineal urethrestotomy in cats 4 main complications

A

i. Urinary tract infection - 25%
□ Anatomical alteration of the urethral meatus and the underlying uropathy increase the risk
ii. Stricture formation
□ Stoma being too small initially
□ Tension
□ Post-operative subcutaneous urine leakage
iii. Haemorrhage
□ Usually mild unless there is self-traumatisation
iv. Others
□ Complication rate is low if done correctly
□ Faecal and urinary incontinence, rectal prolapse, perineal hernia uncommon
Despite increased risk of UTI and the requirement for ongoing management of FLUTD, can be a life- saving procedure

58
Q

Prepibic urethrostomy what is it, which species used in, outcome, issues and procedure

A

○ Salvage procedure mainly used in cats
○ Can be used in dogs as well
○ In males dogs need to use a parapreputial location
○ Outcome was guarded in one study
○ Peristomal inflammation can be a problem
○ Procedure
§ Ventral celiotomy
§ Blunt dissection to mobilize the urethra
§ Severe the distal end of the urethra and exteriorize 2-3cm lateral to the midline
§ Spatulate the end of the urethra
§ Ensure the urethra doesn’t kink
§ Suture the mucosa to the skin

59
Q

Urethral obstruction how important, common cause, initial management and goals

A
  • Diagnosis important because duration of obstruction associated with chance of recovery
  • Ureteroliths are a common cause of ureteral surgery in cats
    ○ Can also get blood clots, circumcaval ureters -> obstruction
  • Initial medical management 1-4 days prior to surgery
    ○ Rehydration
    ○ Diuresis
    ○ Relaxation of ureteral mm
  • Goal = distal migration into bladder avoiding consequences
  • Drugs not commonly used or effective
60
Q

What are the 4 surgical management for urethral obstruction and how done

A
  1. Ureterotomy
    ○ Small size, stricture
  2. Re-implantation
    ○ As for extramural ectopic ureters
  3. Pig-tail catheter/stent
    ○ By-passes obstruction
    ○ Difficult to place, easier to use in dogs as larger ureters
  4. SUB - subcutaneous ureteral bypass - NOW DONE MORE
    ○ Ventral midline laparotomy
    ○ From renal pelvis into the bladder -> artificial ureter
    ○ Leave diseased ureter -> relief of azotaemia and upper urinary tract obstruction
    ○ Flush every 3 months -> to ensure everything is patent
    ○ Can be issue with complications - urinary tract infection
61
Q

Urethral trauma causes and clinical signs

A

Causes
- Mainly secondary to blunt trauma or catheterisation (iatrogenic)
- Pelvic fractures may result in urethral trauma (sharp bone edges) - NEED TO EXAMINE LOWER URINARY TRACT
Clinical signs - depends on where the trauma occurred
- Haematuria, dysuria, anuria, vomiting anorexia, depression
- Abdominal distension (proximal urethra)
- Subcutaneous swelling/celluitis, severe bruising or skin necrosis (distal urethra)
- Signs associated with azotaemia/hyperkalaemia/metabolic acidosis
- Animals may urinate normally
○ Catheterization and bladder expression may all be possible and don’t rule out urethral trauma

62
Q

Urethral trauma diagnosis and stabilisation why needed and small lacerations

A

Diagnosis
- Biochemistry (azotaemia, hyperkalaemia, metabolic acidosis)
- Abdominal/perineal ultrasound
- Abdominocentesis
- Positive contrast urethrocystography
Stabilisation
- Unless urinary tract injury is recognised quickly patients are often very ill when diagnosed
- Stabilisation is required to make safe candidates for general anaesthesia and surgery
○ Small lacerations will heal in 3-5 days with diversion -> Placing a U catheter to act as a stent

63
Q

Urethral resection and anastomaosis is it done, indications and surgical approach

A
  • not done in general practice
    ○ Indications: trauma, stricture and neoplasia -> complete transection
    ○ Surgical approaches
    § Caudal ventral midline abdominal incision: only suitable for proximal urethra
    § Pubic symphysiotomy
    § Bilateral pubic and ischial osteotomy
    § T shaped bone flap
    § Place catheter retrograde from external urethral orifice
64
Q

Urethral prolapse signalment, recent activity, and presentation

A
  • Young male brachycephalic dogs especially English bulldogs
  • May occur after excessive sexual excitement or masturbation
  • Small red pea shaped mass at end of the penis
65
Q

Urethral prolapse treatment

A
  • Surgical resection and suture urethra to penile mucosa is treatment of choice
    ○ Pass urinary catheter and remove protruding mucosa
  • Urethropexy is alternative technique
  • Castration is recommended particularly dogs that have prolapsed due to erection, sexual excitement
66
Q

Bladder trauma causes, repair and main surgical treatment with indications and what can do

A
  • Same as urethral trauma
  • Debride and repair defects with sutures
  • Use omentum/serosal patches to reinforce repair
    Cystectomy
  • Indications - trauma, necrosis, neoplasia
  • About 75% of the bladder can be resected providing the trigone is intact and still have good function
  • Initially urination will be small amounts frequently
    ○ Hypertrophy, mucosal regeneration distension and smooth muscle stretching restore normal voiding volumes within a few months
67
Q

Bladder neoplasia how common, character, most common and history

A
  • 1% of all canine tumours- less in cats
  • 97% are malignant and epithelial
  • Most common in transitional cell carcinoma
    History
  • Older dogs
  • Female dogs at higher risk
  • Neoplasia rare in cats
68
Q

Bladder neoplasia clinical signs and diagnosis

A
Clinical signs 
- Haematuria 
- Pollakiruia (abnormally frequent urination) 
- Stranguira (difficult) 
- Urinary tract infection 
- Palpable caudal abdominal mass
- Bladder distension 
- Weight loss
- Signs are usually chronic 
Diagnosis 
- Urine analysis 
○ Pyuria, haematuria, proteinuria 
- Survey radiographs 
- Positive contrast urography 
- Thoracic radiography - mainly checking for metastasis - 14% of cases 
- Ultrasound 
- Cystoscopy - biopsy and definitive diagnosis 
○ Not FNA -> risk of tumour seeding
69
Q

Bladder neoplasia 3 main treatment options and when can do

A

1) Surgery
- Dogs: within the trigone - not good surgical options
- Cats: down at apex
○ Partial cystectomy -> removal grossly
§ Rare to get complete resection because generally cells left over
- Aggressive tumour but aggressive surgery hasn’t increased survival time
2) Other treatment options
- Chemotherapy - cox-2 inhibitors (piroxicam deracoxib and meloxicam)
- Radiotherapy - not improved survival times
3) Palliative diversion techniques -> generally die from not being able to urinate
- Permanent low profile cystotomy tubes
- Urethral stents
○ Stricture and neoplasia an issue

70
Q

What are common neoplasia of kidney and penis and treatments

A
- Kidney 
○ Renal carcinoma
○ Nephroblastoma
○ Treatment with nephrectomy and ureterectomy 
- Penis
○ Transmissible venereal tumours 
○ SCC
○ Treatment for TCC chemotherapy 
Other tumours may require penile amputation and urethrostomy
71
Q

renal biopsy methods and indications

A
  • Methods
    ○ Blind percutaneous needle
    ○ U/S guided needle
  • Need to biopsy the renal cortex NOT THE MEDULLA
  • Indications
    ○ Trauma to kidney, renal vessels or ureters
    ○ Persistent pyelonephritis
    ○ Persistent obstruction with hydronephrosis
    ○ Renal/peri - renal masses
    ○ Organ harvest for transplantation
72
Q

Feline inappropriate elimination definition, prevalence and gender effect

A

Definition
- Urination and/or defecation in areas that are considered inappropriate by the owner
Prevalence
- Most common behavioural problem in cats
- Approximately 1/3 of cats house soil, spray, or mark
- Urine>both>faces
Gender effect
- House soiling – none
- Spraying/marking – twice as common in males
Problem cats often do not cover urine or faeces

73
Q

Identifying the cat that is doing the inappropriate elimination

A

○ Confinement - not always clear cut because may remove a stressful cat so the remaining cat stops because no longer stress
○ Video
○ Fluorescein caps?
§ 0.5ml of a 10% solution orally OR 6 fluoroscein strips in a capsule
§ False negatives common - if negative not always the actual case
§ Can stain fabric

74
Q

Inappropriate elimination what are the 2 main differentials and how to differentiate

A

1) House soiling
- don’t want to use their little tray (disease or little box issues)
- large volume
- horizontal surfaces
- one or few areas
- sometimes faeces
2) urine spraying
- cause - stress, social sexual behaviour (controlling space)
- small volume
- vertical surfaces
- severeal specific area
- rarely faeces

75
Q

What are the 3 main components of inappropriate elimination and what to do to assess

A
1. Medical 
○ Medical history
○ Physical exam
○ Urinalysis
○ CBC, biochemistry, thyroid assessment
○ Rule out PUPD - water intake
○ Radiography, ultrasonography, endoscopy, biopsy
○ Faecal examination
2. environmental 
○ Diagram of house
§ Urinating near windows -> spaying behaviour most common
§ Litter trays - all in one room -> wrong location 
§ Food and water
§ Elimination
○ Other cats around the house 
3. Behavioural  
○ Development of problem
○ Changes – litter, location, social structure, routine, season
○ Frequency
○ Attempts to treat
76
Q

House soiling differential diagnosis

A
○ Medical disease - need to rule out 
○ Separation anxiety - puddle of urine outside door of bedroom - common cause 
○ behavioural issues
○ soiled areas - don't want to soil (get enzymatic cleaner)
○ Lack of training - lots of cases 
○ Cognitive dysfunction
○ Other age related
§ Incontinence, arthritis
77
Q

House soiling behavioural causes what preferences and aversions are important

A

○ Litter box management - how often wash tray, change litter, scop the pop
○ Number of litter boxes
○ Type of litter box
○ Location of litter box
○ Smell of soiled areas
○ Preferences - box, litter, location
§ Litter -> Small particle size -sandy, unscented litter, clumping, carpet
§ Location -> hallways and closets, easily accessible
□ multi-cat households - guarding litter boxes
§ Box -> cleanliness, detergents, number (number of cats + 1)
○ Aversions - box, litter, location
§ Litter -> Hooded litter boxes, unclean boxes, detergents, liners, frightening/painful event, accessibility
§ Location -> basement and laundry rooms

78
Q

House soiling what are the 5 main treatment options

A

1) clean soiled areas
2) make soiled areas
3) address litter box factors
4) litter tray re-training
5) pharmacolical therapy - MOST DOESN’T REQUIRE DRUG THERAPY

79
Q

What are 2 ways to make soiled areas to prevent house soiling and what involved

A
○ Aversive: don't want to go there 
§ Crushed mothballs
§ Citrus, pine, or lemon scented products
§ Upside-down plastic carpet runner
§ Foil, double sided tape
§ Water in bath
○ Attractive: so don't urinate there 
§ Feliway™ spray q12-24h
§ Food
§ Bedding
§ Toys
80
Q

How to address litter box factors to prevent house soiling

A
○ Accessibility of litter boxes
○ Number of boxes (n+1)
○ Fine, clumping, unscented litter - Depth
○ Litter box hygiene
§ Scoop daily
§ Clean with warm water
§ Replace all litter monthly
○ Type of litter box
§ Open (vs covered)
§ No liner
§ Size of litter box
81
Q

how to litter tray retraining to treat house soiling

A
○ Retraining cat to litter box
○ Confinement and supervision
○ Change substrate preference
§ Carpet to litter
○ Reward elimination in appropriate areas
82
Q

Urine spraying/marking prevalence in what situations ad the gender effect with differential diagnosis

A
Prevalence
- 25% of cats in single cat households
- Close to 100% probability one cat is spraying in households ≥ 10 cats
- Gender effect
○ Males 2 x > females
○ Intact > altered
§ 10% Castrated males continue to spray
§ 5% Spayed females continue to spray
Differential diagnosis
- Medical disease
- House soiling
- Separation anxiety
83
Q

Urine spraying/marking behavioural causes

A
- Stress or anxiety
○ Other cats in the home or outside
§ Active or passive inter-cat aggression
○ Change in environment or schedule
○ Conflict related to a person
- Normal form of territorial communication
84
Q

Urine spraying/marking what are the 5 components for treatment

A

1) surgery
2) Behavioural modification
3) Environmental modification
4) pheromones
5) pharmacological therapy

85
Q

Surgery as part of treatment for urine spraying what is involved and how effective

A

○ Castration - 90% effective in eliminating or markedly reducing
§ Should check cat penis if been castrated -> if spikes present then maybe haven’t been castrated properly OR getting testosterone from somewhere else
○ Ovariohysterectomy - 95% effective in eliminating or markedly reducing

86
Q

Environmental modification as part of the treatment of urine spraying what is involved

A
○ Identify and remove stressors
§ Eliminate outside cats
□ Keep stray animals away from home
® Scarecrow™
® Mothballs
□ Prevent visual access to windows
□ Change to an indoor only cat
§ Feed ad lib (puzzle feeder)
§ Daily fresh water
§ Avoid punishment -> Verbal and physical
§ Environmental enrichment -> Rotate toys, scheduled play time
§ Predictable environment
§ Consistent schedule
§ Multi-cat households
§ Address litter box factors
§ Consistency and predictability - provide stable environment, set schedule, no punishment
87
Q

environmental modification in terms of multi-cat households and litter box factors as part of treatment of urine spraying

A

§ Multi-cat households
□ Create core areas - IMPORTANT
® Food, water, litter box, lying area and scratching post in each cat’s preferred area
® Increase vertical living space (perches)
® Collar activated cat door
□ Address inter-cat aggression
§ Address litter box factors
□ Enzymatic cleaner, scoop box daily, clean and replace litter weekly
□ 71% female, 36% male responded with ≥ 50% ▼marking1
□ Clean soiled areas and make areas aversive or attractive (Feliway™)

88
Q

Pheromones in the treatment of urine spraying what is a common one used, mechanism, properties, use and efficacy

A

○ Feline synthetic facial pheromone
§ Mechanism:
□ Induces cheek gland marking preferably to urine spraying/marking
§ Properties:
□ Anxiolytic
□ Appetite stimulant
□ Lowers aggression?
§ Use: plug in diffuser or spray on marked objects
§ Efficacy:
□ 33% total elimination of spraying
□ 74% to 97% reduction in spraying/marking in multiple studies (USA, UK, France, Japan)

89
Q

Pharmacological therapy in the treatment of urine spraying types, what drugs types involved, drugs

A
○ Anxiolytics
§ Benzodiazepines
□ Diazepam 0.2-0.4 mg/kg q12-24h
□ 55-75% effective in reducing spraying, 75-90% resumed1
§ Azapirones
□ Buspirone 
§ TCA
□ Clomipramine 
® 80% responded (>75% reduction)1
® 35% cessation of spraying1
§ SSRI (preferred drugs)
□ Fluoxetine 
® >90% reduction marking by week two2
® 66% cessation of spraying2
○ Antiandrogenic
§ Progestins (historically)
□ Megestrol acetate, Medroxyprogesterone
® 48% male &amp; 13% female improved1
® Single cat homes responded 50% better1
§ Cyproheptadine
□ 55-75% reduction spraying and masturbation2
□ Cessation of urine spraying for 1 month in castrated male
90
Q

Prognosis for inappropriate urination

A
  • Previously house-trained
  • Duration of problem
  • Pet’s environment (e.g. other cats)
  • Number of areas soiled
  • Ability to control triggers
  • Temperament
  • Owner compliance
  • Medical prognosis
91
Q

Signalment and history
- 2YO MN DSH - CLASSIC SIGNALEMENT -> commonly young
- 2 days anorexia, lethargy and depression
- Urinating outside of litter tray
- Found collapsed
What do you want to do first and next

A
ABCs
- Patent airway
- Breathing
- Heart beat with pulses
Major body system assessment 
- cardiovascular
- respiratory 
- neurologica
- abdominal palpation 
- body temp
92
Q
Collapsed blocked cat
Major Body System Assessment
- Cardiovascular
○ MMs pale, CRT 2.5 sec, pulses v. weak -> severe shock 
○ HR 120, cardiac auscultation OK
§ HR should be 200- ISSUE 
- Respiratory
○ RR 20, effort and auscultation OK
- Neurological
○ V. depressed mentation - due to severe shock 
- Abdominal palpation
○ V. large, hard bladder
- Body temp
○ 36.7C
What to do next
A

Cardiovascular status will kill first
STAY OFF THE PENIS
FIRST - place IV catheter and give fluids

93
Q

Blocked cat what are 7 steps to do with from stabilisation to post treatment

A

1) inital procedures - place IV catheter, emergency database and ECG
2) IV fluids
3) hyperkalaemia treatment - MAIN THING THAT WILL KILL BLOCKED CAT
4) get history from owners
5) talking to the owners
6) unblock the cat
7) further treatment and monitoring

94
Q

Intravenous fluids how important in stabilisation of a blocked cat, what to give and how fast

A
  • ALWAYS stabilise before unblocking
  • There is NO contraindication to rapid fluids in blocked cat (cannot make bladder burst)
  • Which fluid do you want to give? -> Balanced electrolyte (less acidifying)
    ○ NOT -> 0.9% NaCl - acidifying, 0.18% NaCl hypertonic fluid - Na+ increase within the brain -> cerebral oedema
  • How fast?
    ○ ALWAYS give IV fluids if the animal has hypoperfusion
    ○ Rate depends on perfusion status - AGGRESSIVE IN THIS CASE
    § For cats up to 40-60 ml/kg/hr
    § Often use 50-200 ml/hr/cat for first 30-60 minutes in unstable cats
    ○ Reassess every 5-15 min
95
Q

Intravenous fluids benefits in stabilisation of a blocked cat

A
○ Other benefits of fluid therapy 
§ Treats hypovolaemia
§ Dilutes K
§ Promotes renal excretion of K
§ Reverses acidosis (thereby reduces K) -> HCL outside cell goes down, moves outside the cell, K+ moves into cell to maintain neutrality
96
Q

What is the main thing that will kill a blocked cat and the clinical effects

A
Hyperkalaemia treatment - MAIN THING KILLING BLOCKED CAT 
- Clinical Effects of Hyperkalaemia
○ Depression/obtundation
○ Muscle weakness
○ Slow conduction: bradycardia
○ ECG changes - progressive 
i. Bradycardia
ii. Gradual diminution then loss of P waves
iii. Tall T waves
iv. Widening of the QRS complex
○ Reduced cardiac contractility
○ Hypotension
97
Q

When to treat hyperkalaemia and what are the 3 things to treat with

A
  • Treat the patient not the number
  • Hypoperfusion
  • Bradycardia
  • ECG abnormalities
    Treat with
    1) calcium gluconate
    2) dextrose +/- insulin
    3) sodium bicarbonate
98
Q

Calcium gluconate what is it used for, mechanism of action, onset, duration and dose

A

Treat hyperkalaemia
○ Drug of choice
○ Protects the heart but doesn’t treat hyperkalaemia
○ Buys time for unblocking
○ Onset: immediate
○ Lasts: 20-30 minutes -> should get cat unblocked in this time
§ If takes longer can give another dose
○ Give at 1ml/min without ECG, faster if you have one

99
Q

Dextrose +/- insulin what can it be used for, mechanism of action, onset, duration and who not t give to

A

Treat hyperkalaemia
○ Stimulates glucose uptake by cells
§ Uptake via Na/K pump so potassium shifts into cells
○ Onset: “within 1 hour” - NOT QUICK ENOUGH FOR EMERGENCY SITUATIONS
○ Lasts: “few hours”
○ DO NOT give to unstable blocked cats before fluids!

100
Q

Sodium bicarbonate what can be used for, mechanism of action, duration, onset and side effects

A

Treat hyperkalaemia
○ Reduces extracellular H+
○ H+ moves out of cells
○ K+ moves into cells
○ Onset: “within 1 hour”
○ Lasts: “few hours”
○ Possible side effects - RISK BENEFIT RATIO ISN’T JUSTIFIED
§ Hypernatraemia
§ Hyperosmolality
§ Acute CV collapse if given as a rapid bolus
§ Paradoxical intracellular and CSF acidosis