A 10-year-old male castrated Maltese was referred with clinical signs of hematuria,
stranguria, and pollakiuria. The dog was diagnosed with sterile hemorrhagic cystitis with
urethroliths and cystoliths. To remove the uroliths, the dog underwent retrograde
urohydropropulsion followed by a cystotomy. The following day, persistent bleeding in the
urinary bladder was identified with large hematoma, hematuria and anemia. In order to
reduce bleeding, the dog received 10 mg/kg of tranexamic acid (TXA) intravenously.
Immediately after TXA administration, the dog developed anaphylactic shock manifested by
hypotension, hypothermia, tachycardia and a dull mentation. Thus, an emergency treatment
including bolus injection of crystalloid, administration of dexamethasone and
diphenhydramine, and oxygen supplementation was given, after which the dog quickly
recovered within a few minutes.