Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care Medicine: Self-Assessment Color Review, Second Edition, Q&A 20

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A 3-year-old male neutered Dalmatian presents with a 12-hour history of lethargy, straining to urinate, and passing only small amounts of urine (186). T = 38.9°C (102°F); HR = 120 bpm; RR = panting; CRT = 2 sec; MM pink, moist; femoral pulses normal; perfusion and hydration normal. Abdominal palpation finds an enlarged urinary bladder. Rectal examination finds mild prostatic bi-lateral enlargement.

Question Answer Article
Name 10 structures you can palpate on rectal examination in a male dog. Link to Article
Describe how to perform retrograde urohydropulsion to retropulse a urethral stone back into the bladder. Link to Article
What type of urinary calculi are Dalmatians predisposed to developing, and why? Link to Article
Name a treatment for the following bladder stones and identify whether or not the stone type is visible on plain radiographs: (a) struvite (magnesium ammonium phosphate); (b) ammonium biurate; (c) calcium oxalate; (d) cystine; (e) silica. Link to Article
What alternative methods are available for diagnosing stones not visible on plain radiographs? Link to Article


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