Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial

Abstract Background Metronidazole is commonly administered to dogs with acute diarrhea, but there is limited evidence to support this practice. Objective To investigate the effects of metronidazole administration on dogs with acute nonspecific diarrhea. Animals Thirty‐one dogs, including 14 test pop...

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Main Authors: Daniel K. Langlois, Amy M. Koenigshof, Rinosh Mani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15664
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spelling doaj-3ab101f668dd45e29ea9bd80136303442020-11-24T22:10:07ZengWileyJournal of Veterinary Internal Medicine0891-66401939-16762020-01-013419810410.1111/jvim.15664Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trialDaniel K. Langlois0Amy M. Koenigshof1Rinosh Mani2Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University East Lansing MichiganDepartment of Small Animal Clinical Sciences College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University East Lansing MichiganVeterinary Diagnostic Laboratory College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University East Lansing MichiganAbstract Background Metronidazole is commonly administered to dogs with acute diarrhea, but there is limited evidence to support this practice. Objective To investigate the effects of metronidazole administration on dogs with acute nonspecific diarrhea. Animals Thirty‐one dogs, including 14 test population dogs and 17 controls. Methods Randomized controlled clinical trial. Dogs with acute diarrhea in which causation was not determined by routine fecal diagnostic testing were randomly assigned to metronidazole treatment (10‐15 mg/kg PO q12h for 7 days) or placebo. Fecal cultures and characterization of Clostridium perfringens isolates also were performed. Owners maintained medication and fecal scoring logs, and fecal diagnostic tests were repeated on day 7. Results The mean ± SD time to resolution of diarrhea for test population dogs (2.1 ± 1.6 days) was less than that for controls (3.6 ± 2.1 days, P = .04). Potential relationships of C. perfringens with acute diarrhea pathogenesis were not investigated, but only 3 of 13 (23.1%) test population dogs had persistent C. perfringens carriage at day 7, which was less than the 11 of 14 (78.6%) controls with persistent growth (P = .007). Conclusions and Clinical Importance Our results suggest that metronidazole treatment can shorten duration of diarrhea and decrease fecal culture detection of C. perfringens in some dogs with acute nonspecific diarrhea. Additional studies are needed to assess the benefits and risks of routine use of metronidazole for this purpose because most dogs achieve resolution of diarrhea within several days regardless of treatment.https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15664Clostridium perfringensenterotoxingastroenteritistherapy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel K. Langlois
Amy M. Koenigshof
Rinosh Mani
spellingShingle Daniel K. Langlois
Amy M. Koenigshof
Rinosh Mani
Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
Clostridium perfringens
enterotoxin
gastroenteritis
therapy
author_facet Daniel K. Langlois
Amy M. Koenigshof
Rinosh Mani
author_sort Daniel K. Langlois
title Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial
title_short Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial
title_full Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial
title_fullStr Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: A randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial
title_sort metronidazole treatment of acute diarrhea in dogs: a randomized double blinded placebo‐controlled clinical trial
publisher Wiley
series Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
issn 0891-6640
1939-1676
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background Metronidazole is commonly administered to dogs with acute diarrhea, but there is limited evidence to support this practice. Objective To investigate the effects of metronidazole administration on dogs with acute nonspecific diarrhea. Animals Thirty‐one dogs, including 14 test population dogs and 17 controls. Methods Randomized controlled clinical trial. Dogs with acute diarrhea in which causation was not determined by routine fecal diagnostic testing were randomly assigned to metronidazole treatment (10‐15 mg/kg PO q12h for 7 days) or placebo. Fecal cultures and characterization of Clostridium perfringens isolates also were performed. Owners maintained medication and fecal scoring logs, and fecal diagnostic tests were repeated on day 7. Results The mean ± SD time to resolution of diarrhea for test population dogs (2.1 ± 1.6 days) was less than that for controls (3.6 ± 2.1 days, P = .04). Potential relationships of C. perfringens with acute diarrhea pathogenesis were not investigated, but only 3 of 13 (23.1%) test population dogs had persistent C. perfringens carriage at day 7, which was less than the 11 of 14 (78.6%) controls with persistent growth (P = .007). Conclusions and Clinical Importance Our results suggest that metronidazole treatment can shorten duration of diarrhea and decrease fecal culture detection of C. perfringens in some dogs with acute nonspecific diarrhea. Additional studies are needed to assess the benefits and risks of routine use of metronidazole for this purpose because most dogs achieve resolution of diarrhea within several days regardless of treatment.
topic Clostridium perfringens
enterotoxin
gastroenteritis
therapy
url https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15664
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