[Acute poisonings in dogs - a retrospective case study over 5 years].

Tierarztl Prax Ausg K Kleintiere Heimtiere

Abteilung Intensiv- und Notfallmedizin, Kleintierklinik, Ludwig-Maximilian-Universität München.

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A retrospective study analyzed 634 poisoning cases in dogs over 5 years, focusing on clinical signs, suspected toxicants, treatments, and outcomes.
  • Most cases involved unknown toxicants (33%) and food residues (18%), with common symptoms including neurological issues (56%) and a high survival rate of 97%.
  • The study found that while ingestion of food residues was common, many toxicants were unidentified, emphasizing the need for better awareness of potential poison sources.

Article Abstract

Objective: The aim of this retrospective study was to analyze the clinical signs, confirmed or suspected toxicants, treatments and outcomes of poisoning cases in dogs presented over a 5-year period to the emergency service of a small animal referral center.

Material And Methods: Medical records of 634 dogs were evaluated for a history of confirmed or presumed poisoning, suspected toxicant, clinical signs, treatment, and patient outcome. The probability of poisoning was graded based on the patient history, clinical findings, toxicologic examination and - in some cases - investigation of gastrointestinal contents.

Results: Most dogs were hospitalized (77%) due to poisoning with mostly unknown toxicants (33%), food residues (18%), rodenticides (10%), tremorgenic mycotoxins (8%), medications (7%) and various plants (7%), followed by recreational drugs (5%), chemicals (4%), molluscicides (3%), antiparasitics (2%), feces (2%), nuts (2%), or toxins of animal origin (1%). Patients were presented predominantly showing neurologic signs (56%), reduced general condition (39%), and cardiovascular or hydration status abnormalities (26%). The survival rate was 97%. Most dogs were clinically unremarkable at the time of hospital discharge (70%). An additional 18% of the survivors had no apparent complications by the time of discharge. Toxicant-related complications (20.5%) included hemorrhage (4%), hepatic (4%), renal (4%), respiratory (3%), gastrointestinal (3%), cardiovascular (3%), and/or central nervous system (3%) complications, or clinically relevant hypoglycemia (0.3%).

Conclusion And Clinical Relevance: In the present study, poisoning in dogs was mostly associated with the ingestion of food residues, but the causative toxicant remained unidentified in many cases. Neurological signs were the major clinical presentation. The survival rate (97%) in this study was higher compared to those reported by other investigators.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2290-2393DOI Listing

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