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Urinary Tract Infection Treatment Greenville SC

Urinary-tract infections are fairly common in female dogs, but they shouldn’t be recurring the way your dog’s infections appear to be. Here are the reasons the urinary-tract infections may be recurring, and the steps that should be taken to correct the problem. Pinpointing the cause for a dog’s infections is the key to stopping them for good.

Randall C Thomas
864-385-6565
393 Woods Lake Road
Greenville, SC
Pet Med Mobile
(864) 232-2718
707 E Stone Ave
Greenville, SC
Greenville HUmane Society
(864)2423626
328 Furman Hall Rd.
Greenville, SC
North Greenville Animal Hosp
(864) 244-8281
1300 Stallings Rd
Greenville, SC
Pleasantburg Veterinary Clinic, Inc.
864 232-6445
634 S. Pleasantburg Drive
Greenville, SC
Rocky Creek Veterinary Hospital & Pet Resort
(864) 735-8972
111 Ebenezer Rd. 29651
Greer, SC
Richland Creek Animal Clinic
(864) 232-2718
707 E Stone Ave
Greenville, SC
Pleasantburg Veterinary Clinic Inc
(864) 232-6445
634 S Pleasantburg Dr
Greenville, SC
Poinsett Animal Hospital
(864) 233-6903
2606 Poinsett Hwy
Greenville, SC
Ambassador Animal Hospital Pa
(864) 271-1112
715 Wade Hampton Blvd
Greenville, SC
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Curing Dogs' Recurring Urinary-Tract Infections

Q. My 7-year-old Basset Hound keeps getting urinary-tract infections. This is the fifth time. I give her the drugs the vet tells me to, but she just gets the infection again. Should the vet be running more tests to find out why this is happening?

A. Urinary-tract infections are fairly common in female dogs, but they shouldn’t be recurring the way your dog’s infections appear to be. Here are the reasons the urinary-tract infections may be recurring, and the steps that should be taken to correct the problem:

  1. Resistant bacteria. A sterile urine sample should be collected, and submitted to a microbiology lab to see which organisms are growing, and which antibiotics will be effective against the bacteria.

  2. Antibiotics not being given long enough. Sometimes, antibiotics need to be given for three weeks or longer to fully clear the infection. When antibiotic are discontinued too soon, any remaining resistant organisms will reproduce and create a larger colony of equally resistant bacteria.

  3. An anatomical problem that causes repeated infections. Sometimes, bad anatomy can create problems, such as urine pooling or fecal contamination, which lead to repeated urinary-tract infections. An exam, possibly including vaginoscopy (using a scope to examine the vaginal vault), can diagnose an anatomical problem. Sometimes, corrective surgery is required.

  4. A problem with your dog’s immune system. Certain hormonal diseases, such as hypothyroidism or Cushing’s disease...

Author: By Jon Geller, DVM

Copyright 2009 BowTie Inc.

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