Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Prednisolone treatment and survival in dogs with chronic hepatitis
By Favier, Robert P et al.·Published in The veterinary quarterly·2013·a Department of Clinical Sciences of Companion Animals, Netherlands·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A retrospective study of oral prednisolone treatment in canine chronic hepatitis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 36 dogs with chronic hepatitis (liver inflammation) were treated with oral prednisolone, a steroid medication, to see if it could help improve their condition and survival. Most dogs were around 8.6 years old and had been experiencing symptoms for some time. After treatment, 11 dogs showed complete improvement, while others still had issues or unfortunately passed away due to liver-related problems. The treatment was effective in normalizing blood clotting issues in dogs with chronic hepatitis, especially those without cirrhosis (severe liver scarring). However, it didn't seem to help dogs that already had cirrhosis.
People also search for: dog chronic hepatitis treatment · prednisolone for dogs liver disease · dog liver inflammation symptoms
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Only one study reports prednisone to prolong survival in dogs with chronic hepatitis irrespective of the causative agent. The aim of this retrospective study was to investigate the effects of prednisolone treatment on survival, clinicopathological variables, and histological grade and stage of idiopathic chronic hepatitis in 36 dogs. ANIMALS AND METHODS: Medical records were reviewed of 36 prednisolone-treated dogs (median age: 8.6 years; range: 2.0-14.6 years) with chronic hepatitis not associated with primary copper accumulation. Clinicopathological results were analyzed pair-wise for 20 dogs, before and after oral prednisolone administration (1 mg/kg BW/day). Dogs were treated for at least 6 weeks, and for an additional 6 weeks if hepatitis was still present at rebiopsy. Follow-up data pertaining to clinical outcome and survival time (Kaplan-Meier estimate procedure) were analyzed. RESULTS: At the follow-up, 11 dogs were in complete remission, 8 dogs had recurrent clinical signs, and 17 dogs had residual disease. Despite treatment, 20 dogs died of hepatitis-related causes. Dogs without cirrhosis survived significantly longer than dogs with cirrhosis. Prednisolone treatment normalized coagulopathies associated with chronic idiopathic hepatitis within one week in all 10 dogs that had coagulopathies at initial diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that prednisolone has, in part, beneficial effects on hepatic inflammation and that it may, at least in some cases, limit the progression of fibrosis, which emphasizes the importance of early diagnosis and treatment. We did not see any benefit of prednisolone treatment for dogs with cirrhosis. We could document a highly favorable effect of prednisolone treatment on the coagulopathy associated with canine chronic idiopathic hepatitis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23937599/