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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Lactate levels in dog joint fluid for arthritis diagnosis

By Proot, J L J et al.·Published in Veterinary and comparative orthopaedics and traumatology : V.C.O.T·2015·Joachim Proot, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Analysis of lactate concentrations in canine synovial fluid.

Species:
dog
Movement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A study looked at the levels of lactate in joint fluid from dogs to see if it could help diagnose different types of arthritis. They found that dogs with septic arthritis had much higher lactate levels compared to those with osteoarthritis or immune-mediated inflammatory arthritis. While high lactate levels can indicate septic arthritis, low levels can help rule it out. This means measuring lactate in joint fluid can be a quick and cost-effective way for vets to check for septic arthritis in dogs.

People also search for: dog joint fluid test · septic arthritis in dogs · dog arthritis symptoms · how to diagnose dog arthritis

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To report synovial fluid lactate concentrations in normal and pathological canine joints. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled, prospective study. METHODS: Lactate was measured in synovial fluid using a hand-held meter and the rest of the fluid was sent to a commercial laboratory for analysis. Samples were divided into four groups; group 1: control, group 2: osteoarthritis, group 3: immune-mediated inflammatory arthritis, and group 4: septic arthritis. Statistical analysis was performed to compare lactate concentrations between the four groups and to examine the predictive value of lactate in the diagnosis of septic arthritis. A correlation was sought between synovial fluid lactate and synovial fluid total nucleated cell count and total protein. RESULTS: Seventy-four samples were investigated from 55 dogs. Statistical analysis found that lactate concentrations were significantly higher in the septic arthritis group than in each of the other three groups. No significant correlation could be found between synovial fluid lactate concentrations and synovial fluid total nucleated cell count or synovial fluid total protein. Lactate concentration was found to be a useful predictor of septic arthritis, with a low concentration pointing towards exclusion rather than a high concentration to the diagnosis of septic arthritis. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Synovial fluid lactate concentration is not a good marker for osteoarthritis or immune-mediated inflammatory arthritis, but it is significantly increased in septic arthritis and could help the clinician in ruling out this condition in a quick and cost-effective way.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26058798/