“…Surgical options are available where the response to medical management is unsatisfactory, or owners would prefer to avoid long‐term medical management. Surgical management of canine female USMI has been reported clinically using procedures including colposuspension (Holt 1990, Muir and others 1994, Rawlings and others 2001), urethropexy (Massat and others 1993, White 2001), urethral submucosal injections with either collagen (Arnold and others 1996, Barth and others 2005, Byron and others 2011), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) (Arnold and others 1989) or extracellular matrix bioscaffold (Wood and others 2005), transobturator vaginal tape, inside out (TVT‐O) (Claeys and others 2010a, 2010b), Dacron ® coated Silastic ® sheet urethral sphincter (Dean and others 1989), and, most recently, a static hydraulic urethral sphincter (SHUS) (Rose and others 2009). The most common complications seen following all of these described surgical managements include persistent incontinence (immediate or delayed), dysuria, urinary obstruction, haematuria and recurrent urinary tract infection (UTI) (Arnold and others 1989, 1996, Holt 1990, White 2001, Barth and others 2005, Byron and others 2011).…”