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Female dog repeate UTI help

Posted on 11/6/24 at 9:27 am
Posted by tadman
Member since Jun 2020
5159 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 9:27 am
I have a female dog that is really a terrific household member, but she is getting 3-4 UTI per year and thats too much in my book. We are of course working with a trusted and capable veterinarian but can anybody suggest food or lifestyle changes that have worked in the past for a dog you had?

Thanks.
Posted by dpier16
Member since Aug 2016
282 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 9:44 am to
My Boykin used to get them repeatedly along with agitated skin

Changed food to a salmon base/beef based and the problem seemed to stop. She still has them occasionally (one per year maybe), but just the feed change seemed to reduce both. While it may be just correlation and not causation, I wont be switching her back to chicken based foods.

Posted by cchoque93
Alabama
Member since Dec 2011
768 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 10:19 am to
My 6yo female lab starting getting them frequently and the vet eventually did a scan and found she had bladder cancer. She made it a few more months until we had to put her down.
Posted by LeeeroyJenkins
Member since Aug 2024
852 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 12:48 pm to
quote:

salmon base/beef based


This is 100% the way; get your pup off grain based diet and go to primary meat.
Posted by No Colors
Sandbar
Member since Sep 2010
12917 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 1:25 pm to
Just curious how you know when she has a UTI???
Posted by dpier16
Member since Aug 2016
282 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 1:27 pm to
Their piss/rear end smells like a rotten speckle trout head thats been left in the sun/icechestfor 3 days, the dog is constantly peeing small amounts, and dog is constantly licking rear end. That's generally the tell tell signs I've seen.
Posted by grock4092
Member since Jan 2018
5 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 4:07 pm to
From what I’ve learned so far in vet school:
UTIs are sometimes very tough to fully eradicate once they get the first one. Bacteria/causative agent can be dormant and non-problematic in the bladder/tissues surrounding urinary tract for quite a while and go undetected then flare up from time to time.

Best thing, as the OBers above mentioned is find a diet/lifestyle that will help minimize whatever is causing the relapses, then just treat it as it comes up.

Grain vs no grain vs type of protein in the diet, hard to say which one is actually better, huge variations breed to breed and within individuals, but anything that would cause inflammation or GI issues should be avoided.

There are prescription diets that the vet can get you on that can help protect the urinary tract and might help lessen the occurrence.
Posted by AUVet21
Member since Sep 2022
361 posts
Posted on 11/6/24 at 9:02 pm to
Not trying to assume anything but is your dog really fat? Or is her lady parts really small and tucked under? Both are predisposing for UTIs in females
Posted by tadman
Member since Jun 2020
5159 posts
Posted on 11/7/24 at 7:53 am to
quote:

Just curious how you know when she has a UTI???



Both recent cases have been confirmed by a trusted veterinarian, but usually frequent urination needs followed by squatting with little coming out, really bad urine stench, crying at the front door at 2am to go out, etc...

I've captured a few urine samples using a old frying pan and the color is not a healthy urine color according to those charts you see in bathrooms that tell us how much to hydrate, and also it STINKS.

After she's had so many of them, its like diagnosing a mild infection in a small child, you get the hang of it.
Posted by tadman
Member since Jun 2020
5159 posts
Posted on 11/7/24 at 7:54 am to
quote:

Not trying to assume anything but is your dog really fat? Or is her lady parts really small and tucked under? Both are predisposing for UTIs in females



She's a 100lb adult pyrenees mix, which is slightly heavy for females according to my vet but average according to some books I have on my shelf. That could be part of it. I don't have an opinion on her anatomy shape but I can ask my vet.
Posted by jimjackandjose
Member since Jun 2011
6670 posts
Posted on 11/7/24 at 8:04 pm to
Had this issue with my female lab and went to all distilled water for her

Cleaned up pretty quick
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