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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with no fibrinogen and antibody causing bleeding after spay

By Wilkerson, Melinda J et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2005·Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Afibrinogenemia and a circulating antibody against fibrinogen in a Bichon Frise dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 1.5-year-old female Bichon Frise was brought to the vet after experiencing severe bleeding following a spay surgery, requiring four blood transfusions. Tests showed that her blood wasn't clotting properly due to a lack of fibrinogen, a protein essential for blood clotting. Further investigation revealed that she had developed an antibody that was preventing her body from forming clots effectively. Fortunately, with careful monitoring and treatment, the dog was able to recover from this serious condition.

People also search for: Bichon Frise bleeding after spay · dog blood transfusion complications · dog clotting problems treatment

Abstract

A 1.5-year-old female Bichon Frise dog was evaluated for a life-threatening hemorrhagic condition that occurred after ovariohysterectomy, requiring 4 whole-blood transfusions. A hemostatic profile, including activated clotting time (ACT), one-stage prothrombin time (OSPT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), buccal mucosal bleeding time, and specific assays (heat-precipitation microhematocrit method and electroimmunoassay) for fibrinogen, were performed to investigate the coagulopathy. Clotting times for all tests having a fibrin clot endpoint (ACT, OSPT, APTT) and buccal mucosal bleeding time were prolonged. Plasma fibrinogen was not detected by heat-precipitation microhematocrit method or electroimmunoassay. Using the Ellis-Stransky method, a mixture of patient plasma and normal canine plasma with known fibrinogen content yielded substantially less than the calculated fibrinogen concentration, indicating the presence of an interfering substance. The interferent properties of the patient's plasma were retained following heat precipitation at 56 degrees C indicating the absence of a pyroglobulin or an abnormal fibrinogen molecule. Radial immunodiffusion assay using the patient's plasma and activated thrombin confirmed the existence of an inhibitor to the formation of fibrin. Western blot analysis using the patient's plasma identified an IgG antibody that reacted with the Beta- and gamma- but not the Alpha-subunits of canine fibrinogen. Antibody was detected in samples taken 8, 16, and 68 days after the surgery; peak titers were evident at day 16. These results supported a diagnosis of afibrinogenemia with a circulating antibody inhibitor to fibrin clot formation that developed secondary to blood transfusion.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15902668/