Urolithiasis in Dalmatians: 275 cases (1981-1990)

Abstract
Summary: From July 1, 1981 to December 31, 1990 the Urinary Stone Analysis Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California received 292 urinary calculi from 275 Dalmatians (14 females, 14 episodes; 261 males, 278 episodes). The mean age of dogs at the time of the first episode of calculus formation was 4.5 years for males and 5.5 years for females. Bacteria were isolated from 22 of 49 calculi (45%). The bacteria were gram-positive with 2 exceptions; coagulase-positive staphylococci accounted for 62.5% of the isolates. Polarized light microscopy was used to determine the mineral content of the calculi. One hundred ninety three calculi were 100% urate; 78 calculi contained ≥ 50% urate in 1 or more layers and were classified as mixed urate calculi; 7 calculi contained < 50% urate in all layers; and 14 calculi contained no urate. The secondary minerals most commonly encountered in mixed urate calculi were struvite (77%, 60 of 78 calculi), and oxalate (17%, 13 of 78 calculi). There were 65 struvite-containing calculi, 16 oxalate-containing calculi, 7 apatite-containing calculi, 5 silica-containing calculi, and 1 calculus specimen was composed of 100% cystine. The risk of forming urate-containing calculi was high in Dalmatians, whereas the risk of forming calculi containing other minerals was consistently lower in Dalmatians than in other breeds. X-ray diffraction and high pressure liquid chromatography were performed on all calculi from dogs known to have been given allopurinol (n = 19). One hundred percent of these calculi were found to contain xanthine or other compounds related to administration of allopurinol (eg, hypoxanthine, allopurinol, or oxypurinol).

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