Interpretation of Specialty Exams Clinical Pathology: The patient is slightly hyperglycemic, which is probably the result of stress-induced gluconeogenesis. The hyperphosphatasemia is probably due to an increase in the bone isoform of this enzyme, which increases with osteoblast activity (resulting from reparative efforts). The patient is hyponatremic and hypochloridemic (most of the conditions that cause the former cause the later). These ions were likely lost in blood and plasma via wounds from the hit. When the patient was rehydrated, the fluids administered diluted the remaining ions. Hemorrhage has also caused an anemia (hematocrit is low). The leukogram is difficult to interpret since no total white cell count was given and the cell types are listed as percentages. We expect neutrophils to be the largest cell type in numbers and it is. No bands indicates no left shift, so inflammation is established (the bone marrow is caught up), if present at all (we expect that it would be). The urine is slightly concentrated, which can certainly be normal. Amorphous crystalluria and a few epithelial cells can also be normal in the dog (depending on how the sample was taken). A 1+ bilirubinuria can also be normal with a concentrated urine in dogs. This patient's urine is only slightly concentrated, and bilirubin crystals are also found, so the bilirubin might possibly be resulting from clean-up and digestion of released red cells in internal hemorrhage. The positive occult blood on the dipstick test could indicate hematuria, hemoglobinuria, or myoglobinuria. Muscle destruction is likely, so myoglobinuria is a fair possibility. Radiographs The radiographs reflect a midshaft fracture of the left femur with complete dissociation and bony fragments and a midshaft fracture of the right tibia showing less need for reduction than the femur, but bony fragments surrounding.