Abstract: | A dog with oliguric acute renal failure presumed to have been caused by ethylene glycol ingestion was treated by hemodialysis for 1 month. Hemodialysis was effective in controlling azotemia, hyperphosphatemia, and hyperkalemia when performed on a daily or alternate-day basis. The major complications during treatment were infection and severe weight loss. Serial renal biopsies disclosed a progression from initial acute tubular necrosis to severe diffuse interstitial fibrosis and mononuclear cell inflammation. Infection, cachexia, development of end-stage renal lesions, and terminal hyperkalemia contributed to the eventual death of the dog. |