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. 1996 Feb 15;208(4):537-41.

Hospital-acquired acute renal failure in dogs: 29 cases (1983-1992)

Affiliations
  • PMID: 8603903
Free article

Hospital-acquired acute renal failure in dogs: 29 cases (1983-1992)

E N Behrend et al. J Am Vet Med Assoc. .
Free article

Abstract

Objective: To assess factors associated with development of hospital-acquired acute renal failure (HARF) and to determine outcome of and prognostic indicators for dogs with HARF.

Design: Retrospective case series.

Animals: 29 dogs.

Results: The most common inciting causes for developments of HARF were exposure to a nephrotoxicant and advanced age. Mortality was 62%, and factors that contributed to mortality were age and initial urine output. Dogs > or = 7 years old and dogs that were initially oliguric had an odds ratio of mortality of 8.8 and 20, respectively. The effect of preexisting heart disease on mortality approached significance (P = 0.053). The magnitude of azotemia at the time of diagnosis was not related to the chance for survival. Dogs that died had a significantly higher initial anion gap and serum phosphorus concentration than did dogs that survived. We did not detect a relationship between cause of HARF and outcome (survived vs died or euthanatized).

Clinical implications: In most cases, HARF is associated with a poor outcome. Older dogs may be at increased risk for development of HARF, and once HARF has developed, have a greater chance of dying. Prognosis can not be determined on the magnitude of azotemia at the time of diagnosis or on the inciting cause of HARF.

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