I always thought that a UTI (urinary tract infection) would scream it's presence loud and clear.
Frequent urination, but usually small amounts at the time, difficulty urinating, urine dribbling, urinary accidents, smelly urine, maybe some blood in it ... you know, what you picture when you're thinking about a UTI.
As it turns out, a UTI doesn't have to come screaming with any of those.
Firstly, there are things that can cloud the issue, such as if your dog is on steroids.
Being on steroids on its own causes increased drinking and urination.
How would that be different from a urinary tract infection? On steroids, Jasmine would pee somewhat more frequently, quite large volumes each time. With an infection, you'd expect smaller amounts more frequently. But with Jasmine, this was not the case.
Being on steroids increases the chances of your dog getting an infection, a UTI being one of them.
So now you have a situation which makes it more likely for your dog to get an infection and makes it harder to tell what is going on at the same time.
Here is how it played out with Jasmine.
While on the steroids, her drinking was somewhat increased but nowhere near to what I expected. Her urination also increased but more in volume rather than in frequency. She'd typically ask to go out once or twice more often that normally.
Once she was weaned off them, we assumed this to go away but didn't expect it to go away over night.
Couple days after she was off the steroids Jasmine started drinking more than usually; even more than when she was on the steroids. That was strange and alarming, so I talked to the vet about it right away.
He said we should start with urinalysis to see what might be going on.
He did mention UTI but it was not adding up with the symptoms to me at all. She was not showing any of the typical symptoms ...?
After a day and a half of increased drinking, it suddenly stopped and went back to normal. False alarm? Body adjusting to getting off the meds?
After another talk with the vet we all figured it was a false alarm.
"We don't need to do the urinalysis if she's not sick," he said.
Was she sick or wasn't she?
Jasmine was still urinating somewhat larger volume and the urine looked somewhat more dilute than normally, but not more than when on the steroids. So the question was, how long should it take for things go back to normal? Blood work would show a dog on steroids for between two weeks to a month. For the sake of the stem cell therapy it is recommended to wait 45 days, so clearly, the body might not be back to normal before that...
Jasmine also had some stomach upsets and stool trouble before, which was believed to be an effect of the meds, perhaps this was part of that also?
The symptoms were as vague as you can come up with.
Jasmine seemed kind of under the weather.
There was nothing one could put their finger on. Her appetite was lower that I'd expect, and no, it wasn't because she was so hungry while on the steroids. I wasn't comparing her appetite to that on steroids, but to that before. It was still lower than that.
Mostly it was just a feeling I had, that something wasn't right.
Could it all be just her coming of the steroids? Perhaps. But a worried mom that I am, based on the funny feeling, I decided to do the urinalysis after all.
And what do you know, the urinalysis results did point to a UTI quite clearly.
Seriously? With such a lack of the signs you always read about? Frankly, though, I was glad it was something simple; I was worried about her kidneys.
Jasmine was put on antibiotics, the signs had resolved and the follow up urinalysis says the infection is gone.
So it seems there is one we can cross of the board. Her blood work also didn't show anything alarming. I am still keeping a watchful eye on Jasmine.
Did you dog ever had a UTI with vague symptoms? How did you figure it out?
Tuesday, 26 March 2013
I Always Thought That A UTI Would Scream It's Presence
Posted on 12:00 by Unknown
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