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VMD 461B Westropp

Small animal medicine (Urinary)

QuestionAnswer
What is the difference between pollakiuria and PU/PD? PU/PD = increased drinking/urination; conscious of action (just can't make it out of the house); not incontinence Pollakiuria = small frequent urinations (form of incontinence)
Where does the Sympathetic Nervous System exit the spinal canal? L1-L4
Trace the sympathetic NS from the exit of the spinal canal to the bladder and internal sphincter -Exits at L1-4 -to the caudal mesenteric ganglia -sends 2 branches of the hypogastric n. -one to the bladder and one to the internal urethral sphincter
SNS innervation of the bladder branch of hypogastric n. --> NE--> B receptors--> relax bladder
SNS innervation of the internal urethral sphincter branch of hypogastric n.-->NE-->alpha receptors--> increased sphincter tone
Urinary incontinence lack of voluntary control over the passage of urine
Where does the parasympathetic NS exit the spinal canal S1-S3
Trace the PNS from the exit of the spinal canal to the bladder -S1-3 -the pelvic n. releases ACh onto muscarinic receptors of the detrusor muscle -causes contraction of the bladder
Somatic nervous system innervation of the bladder -Pudendal n. releases ACh onto nicotinic receptors of the external urethral sphincter -increases sphincter tone
The external urethral sphincter is made up of what type of muscle and what type of receptors? -skeletal muscles -nicotinic receptors
The general effect of increased sympathetic tone on the urinary bladder and urethral sphincter is: urine storage -bladder relaxation -increase internal sphincter tone
The general effect of increased parasympathetic tone on the urinary bladder is: Voiding - bladder contraction
The general effect of increased somatic activity on the bladder and sphincter are Urine Storage - no effect on bladder - increase external urethral sphincter tone
What part of the brain determines the onset of urination? The forebrain
4 classifications of urinary incontinence -Anatomic abnormalities -Decreased urethral closure pressure -Increased urethral closure pressure/outlet obstruction -Overactive bladder
General diagnostics for incontinent animals (not including diagnostics for specific conditions) -Watch the animal void -Evaluate vulvar conformation -Urinalysis -Urine culture
Anatomic abnormalities -Ectopic ureters -Pelvic bladders -Ureterocoeles -Bladder and urethral hypoplasia
Typical signalment for ectopic ureter -young (<1yr), female -Siberian Husky, Lab, Golden Retriever -most probably bilateral -very rare in cats
Diagnosis of ectopic ureter (not including general diagnostics) -Cystoscopy -IVP, nephropyelogram, retrograde ureterogram, vestibulovaginogram -Contrast CT
What are the advantages of cystoscopy for the diagnosis of EU? -can evaluate vestibule -easy detection of fenestrations -can evaluate mucosa
What are the disadvantages of cystoscopy for the diagnosis of EU? -no evaluation of upper urinary tract -trigone poorly characterized in EU dogs -evaluation depends on vesicourethral jxn, which can be poorly defined in EU dogs
What diagnostics can you use to evaluate the upper urinary tract? -contrast studies -abdominal ultrasound
What additional diagnostics should you do if you are doing a cystoscopy? -anything that looks at the upper urinary tract -urodynamic testing
What will urodynamic testing test for? concurrent decreased sphincter tone and increased bladder contractility
Treatment for EU? -Sx is standard -laser therapy is new and promising
What should you tell owners of a dog having EU surgically corrected? -surgery is only about 50% curative -the dog may have other concurrent disorders that need to be treated as well
Pelvic bladder -bladder located far back in pelvis -urethra is short and wide
Diagnosis of Pelvic bladder -contrast urogram
Treatment of pelvic bladder -Sx (colosuspension), but not very successful -should be performed as a last result (after medical management?)
Ureterocoele -"outpouching" of the ueter -concurrent problem with EU -predispose to recurrent UTI
Bladder and urethral hypoplasia very rare
Causes of decreased urethral closure pressure -USMI -injury to hypogastric nerve
USMI urethral sphincter mechanism incompetence -20% spayed females within 3yrs -middle aged FS dogs -Dobermans and Old English Sheepdogs -can be concurrent with EU
Diagnosis of USMI Diagnosis of exclusion -signalment and history -NE -urethral pressure profile (gold standard, but not routine) -check urine sg
Treatment of USMI -alpha adrenergic agonists -estrogens -GnRH analogues -collagen procedures
Urodynamics - Urethral pressure profile (looks at urethral closure pressure) - Cystometrogram (looks at detrusor muscle)
Indications for urodynamic studies -refractory sphincter mechanism incontinence -reflex dyssynergy -UMN and LMN bladders -EU (screening for other probs prior to Sx)
Alpha adrenergic agonists -phenylpropanolamine (PPA) = mixed alpha agonist -Tx USMI (75-90% good response) -others (pseudoephedrine, ephedrine) -PPA superior to pseudoephedrine
Side effects of PPA and Pseudoephedrine -excitability -tachycardia -aggression -hypertension
Estrogens - estradiol receptors in the transitional epithelium of the proximal urethra -increase alpha receptor sensitivity to NE (can be used with alpha agonists) -65% response -DES, Premarin, Estriol
What is an advantage of Estrogens over PPA in the Tx of USMI? -dosing is much lower (given weekly instead of daily) so cost will be lower
Side effects of Estrogens -bone marrow suppression (rare at these doses)
Submucosal urethral collagen injections -blebs of collagen placed cystoscopically just distal to the trigone - to close urethral lumen (Tx USMI) -variable response -in animals where medical Tx not working or contraindicated
Increased Urethral Closure Pressure -"overflow bladder" -history of stranguria or poor urine stream prior to incontinence -older, male, large breed dogs -mechanical or functional
GnRH analogues -Tx for USMI -downregulate FSH and LH which might be contributing to USMI -variable response (not widely used in US)
Mechanical increased urethral closure pressure -urethrolith -neoplasia -severe/proliferative urethritis
Functional increased urethral closure pressure -UMN disorder (T3-L3 lesion --> hypogastric) -urethral spasms -reflex dyssenergy
Diagnosis of increased urethral closure pressure -Watch the animal urinate -neuro and ortho exams -UA and UCS -Residual urine volume -urethral pressure profile (gold std) -Rads, cystoscopy, contrast imaging (to find mechanical obstruction)
Treatment of increased urethral closure pressure -keep residual urine volume low -alpha antagonists (prazosin)do this first -parasympathomimetics for detrusor atony (behtanecol)
Phenoxybenzamine Prazosin -Tx increased urethral closure pressure (functional urethral obstruction) -alpha antagonists -SE= weakness, lethargy, hypotension
Bethanecol -Tx increased urethral closure pressure (detrusor atony) -parasympathomimetic (contract bladder) -SE= SLUDS
Detrusor hyperreflexia "overactive bladder" -usually not the sole cause of incontinence -distinguish from behavioral probs and submissive urinations
Diagnosis of overactive bladder -cystometrogram
Cystometrogram -assesses threshold volume and pressure, and compliance
Indications for cystometrogram -ectopic ureters -assessment of urinary incontinence -idiopathic cystitis -response to drug therapy
Common causes of Overactive Bladder -UTI -Cystic calculi -Neoplasia -Bladder polyps -rarely idiopathic
Treatment of idiopathic detrusor hyperreflexia -anticholinergics/parasympatholytics (oxybutinin, tolterodine) -tricyclic antidepressants
Side effects of oxybutinin and tolterodine -urine retention -dry mouth -dry eye (usually only reported in humans)
3 categories of urolithiasis formation 1.increase in urine mineral content (increase in supersaturation) 2.promoter in urine that potentiates stone formation 3.absence of inhibitors of stone formation in the urine
Clinical signs of urolith in lower UT, bladder or urethra -pollakiuria -stranguria -hematuria -(+/-)incontinence
Clinical signs of urolith in upper UT, kidneys or ureters -vague -anorexia -malaise -sublumbar/kidney pain -uremia
Intrinsic factors that predispose to urotlithiasis -Breed -Age -Gender
Breeds associated with struvite and CaOx stones -Mini Schnauzer -Bichon Frise
Breeds associated with urate stones -Dalmation -English Bulldog
Breeds associated with cystine stones -Dachshund -Newfoundland -English Bulldog
What age is most common for CaOx stones -middle age
What age is most common for silica stones -old dogs
What gender is predisposed to struvite stones Female
With which stones are male dogs, more than females, likely to present? -Oxalate -Cystine -Urate -Silicate
What are extrinsic factors in stone formation -commercial diets -Homemade diets
Precipitation-crystallization theory -incriminates supersaturation with crystalloids as primary factor in precipitation and growth of calculi
Matrix nucleation theory -implies that some abnormal substance in the urine is responsible for the initial development of calculi
Crystallization-inhibition theory -suggests that the absence of some critical inhibitor of crystal formation is the primary factor in the development of calculi
Inhibitors of crystallization -decrease urinary supersaturation by forming ion complexes -alter properties of crystal surfaces e.g. citrate and phosphates
Epitaxy precipitation of one crystal on the surface of another
Promoters of urolithiasis -abnormal urine proteins? -Epitaxy (CaOx, CaP, uric acid)
T/F Crystalluria is always an indication of stone formation False. Crystalluria can be found in healthy cats and dogs
What 2 crystals would warrant further workup if you found them on a patient's urinalysis? -Urate (ammonium biurate) -Cystine
Homogenous nucleation -Spontaneous, sustained nucleation that occurs in highly supersaturated(unstable) solution in the absence of preformed organic or crystalline material
What are the three different solubility states of a substance? -stable -metastable -unstable
Stable Solution -crystals will not form -existing stones may dissolve
Metastable Solution -Heterogenous nucleation may occur -inhibitors will impede or prevent crystallization -crystal aggregation will occur -this is where we treat to prevent formation
Unstable Solution -Inhibitors generally not effective -Nucleation will occur
Matrix -substances incorporated into stone lattice as it forms -keeps the crystals together like glue e.g. proteins, cell debris, foreign bodies, drug residues, Tamm Horsfall protein
T/F In UA results of a urolithiasis patient, crystal type doesn't always indicate stone type. True
Coffin lid crystals Struvite
Picket fence crystals CaOx monohydrate
Maltese cross crystals CaOx dihydrate
When do you usually see low/moderate levels of amorphous phosphate crystals -when the urine sample has sat around for a while
Stop sign crystals Cystine
Diagnosis of urolithiasis -plain rads -contrast rads -excretory urography (for kiney and uretoliths) -cystourethrogram -US (doesn't evaluate the urethra) -cystoscopy -Catheterization (to dislodge stone)
On a double contrast study, how do you tell the difference between an air bubble and a stone? - air bubbles are perfectly round
Stone radiodensity (decreasing order) Piss (Struvite = magnesium ammonium Phosphate) On (calcium Oxalate) Cornell (Cystine) University (Urate)
What 2 stones are not radiodense? How do you diagnose them? - Purine and Cystine stones - Need US or contrast study to Dx
Treatment options for urolithiasis -Dissolution -Voiding urohydropropulsion -Basket retrieval -Holmium:YAG laser lithotripsy -Surgery
Which stones can be treated with dissolution protocols? Which stone cannot? -can be dissolved: struvite (and possibly urate and cystine) -can't be dissolved: Ca Oxalate
What are the advantages of voiding urohydropropulsion? -good for patients with recurrent stones -removes stones while they're small -avoids surgery
What complications are associated with voiding hydropropulsion? -Hematuria (resolves ~24hrs) -Can rupture the bladder if small stones are blocking the urethra
Laser lithotripsy -can break up stones that are otherwise too big to void
What procedure should always be performed after stone removal? -radiographs to look for remaining stones
is quantitative or qualitative stone analysis more useful? quantitative
what type of stone analysis should you do if you suspect uric acid calculi? HPLC, because it tells the difference between pure urate and metabolites
Primary calculi commonly identified in dogs -Struvite -CaOx -CaP (apatite) -Urate -Cystine -Silica
Primary calculi commonly identified in cats -Struvite -CaOx -Urate -Dried solidified blood (DSB) -CaP (apatite)
CaOx stones in cats and dogs -mono and dihydrate forms (same Tx) -most often in the bladder
Ureteral stones in a cat are usually... CaOx
Ureteral stones in a dog are usually... Struvite
Canines at risk for CaOx -small yappy dogs -Mini Pinscher, Maltese, Bichon, Lhasa Apso, Chihuahua, Keeshound -males >females -middle aged dogs
Felines at risk for CaOx -Middle aged cats -Males > females -Persians
What effect does dietary acidification have on CaOx stone formation? -decreases urine pH (increases urine acidity) -increases urine Ca excretion -predisposes to CaOx stone formation
What are the two common uroliths reported in dogs? #1 CaOx #2 Struvite
Upper urinary tract stones in cats are almost always... CaOx
Prevention of CaOx stones -Evaluate P for hypercalcemia, hypertriglyceridemia -evaluate diet and environment -increase water intake (moist food, NaCl) -Periodic rads and voiding hydropropulsion -monitor urine -Medications
Medications for the prevention of CaOx stones... When should you use them? -potassium citrate (chelator) -hydrochlorothiazide (increases Ca resorption) Wait to use them until it is a recurrent problem.
Dietary principles for CaOx prvention -increase moisture -NaCl to increase water intake -low fat/calorie (for animals with hypertriglyceridemia)
Protocol for CaOx stone Treatment -remove stones and rad prior to recovery -culture urine -check calcium and triglycerides -put on high moisture, moderate pH diet -increase water intake -rad periodically, possibly VUH
Struvite uroliths in dogs -2nd most common stone in dogs (caused by infections by urease producing bacteria) -females>males
what are the 2 most common stones in cats? CaOx and struvite (1:1)
what would make you suspect struvite in a dog? in a cat? -dog with a urease producing bacterial UTI -cat with urine pH >6.8 and history
How do you check on O compliance when treating a cat for struvite stones? pH should be low urine specific gravity should be low
what are contraindications for dissolution? -urethral obstruction or high risk of obstruction -young animals -lactating animals
what diet should you choose for a dog with struvite stones? haha, trick question. Struvite stones are associated with UTI in the dog
Calcium Phosphate stones -2 forms (apatite and brushite) -precipitates at high pH (alkaline urine) -no dissolution protocol -usually secondary stone
Purine metabolism dietary and endogenous purines --(xanthine oxidase)-->hypoxanthine--(xanthine oxidase)-->uric acid--(uricase)-->allantoin
Urate uroliths (cats) -not usually associated with underlying disorders -check liver function anyway -if liver is normal, manage with high moisture/low protein diet
Urate uroliths (Dalmations) -genetic defect of transporter that brings uric acid into the hepatocyte -excrete more uric acid in the urine
Urate uroliths (English Bulldog, Jack Russell Terrier) -may have similar transport defect as dalmations -may have underlying liver dysfunction
urate uroliths (non-dalmation dogs) -evaluate liver function -in EBD and JRT, if liver is normal, test uric acid transporter
Treatment of urate uroliths in dalmations -increase water intake -allopurinol -low purine diet -alkalinize the urine
Allopurinol -Treatment of urate stones in Dalmations -xanthine oxidase inhibitor (less uric acid produced) -must feed low purine diet -SE (high dose): xanthine stone formation
Treatment of urate stones in non-Dalmation dogs -treat underlying liver disorder(PSS) -Sx to remove uroliths -VUH
Cystine stones -very rare in cat -Newfoundland, EBD, Dachshund -98% males -defect in proximal renal tubule
Proximal renal tubular membrane transporter defect affects what amino acids? Cystine Ornithine Lysine Arginine
Treatment for cystine stones -high moisture, low protein diet -2-MPG -D-penicillamine
2-MPG -Treatment of cystine stones -forms disulfide bridge with cysteine and decreases cystine excretion SE: mild GI and aggression
D-Penicillamine -Treatment of cystine stones -forms disulfide bridges with cysteine and decreases cystine excretion SE: GI
Cystine prevention -Alkalinize urine (K citrate) >7.8
Silica uroliths -uncommon in dogs (mostly older males) -GSD, Labs, Goldens -not in cats -jack-like appearance
Mixed uroliths mineral composition mixed throughout the stome
Compound urolith core and shell of different mineral compositions (layered) -treatement is aimed at the nucleus of the calculus (not the shell)
Host defenses to UTI -urine (high osmolality and acidity) -uretrha (longer in male, hydrokinetic washout) -urothelium (local immunoglobulins) -ureters and kidneys (oblique entrance)
Does dilute urine predispose to UTI? No
UTI Virulence factors -urease -beta lactamase -flagella -R plasmid mediated resistance
Urease producing bacteria -Staph -Proteus -Klebsiella
Created by: modonnell
 

 



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