Chronic kidney disease in a dog of the Teckel breed: Case report

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Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a disease characterized by the gradual and functional loss of renal mass, affecting its physiology leading to clinical manifestations. The CKD reaches dogs of several breeds causing important clinical alterations. Some laboratory tests are determinant for the correct diagnosis and thus for the implementation of the most appropriate treatment. The urinalysis, urinary protein-creatinine ratio (UPC) evaluation, urea, and creatinine dosage together with the symmetric dimethylarginine dosage (SDMA), urinary tract ultrasonography and blood pressure monitoring, are the main methods used for diagnosis. In this way, this work aimed to report a case of CKD in a Teckel dog attended at the Veterinary Hospital of the Federal University of Jataí (UFJ), discussing the main clinical manifestations, laboratory, and image alterations, as well as the correct staging according to IRIS (Interest Renal International Society), from which the best treatment option to be adopted is determined.

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de Moraes, R. S., Neto, A. C. S., Germano, G. L., Ferraz, H. T., & Romani, A. F. (2020). Chronic kidney disease in a dog of the Teckel breed: Case report. Acta Veterinaria Brasilica, 14(4), 215–219. https://doi.org/10.21708/AVB.2020.14.4.9322

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