Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Pancreatitis test results and survival in dogs on dialysis for kidney
By Takada, K et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2018·William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Assessment of Canine Pancreas-Specific Lipase and Outcomes in Dogs with Hemodialysis-Dependent Acute Kidney Injury.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 53 dogs with severe acute kidney injury (AKI) underwent hemodialysis treatment, and many also had high levels of a specific enzyme (pancreas-specific lipase) that could indicate pancreatitis. After 30 days, 76% of these dogs were still alive, but there was no clear link between the enzyme levels and whether the dogs survived or needed ongoing dialysis. This suggests that while many dogs had elevated lipase levels, it didn't significantly impact their chances of recovery. The findings highlight the complexity of treating dogs with AKI, especially when other health issues like pancreatitis are present.
People also search for: dog kidney injury treatment · pancreatitis in dogs symptoms · hemodialysis for dogs with kidney disease
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Renal replacement therapies can be life-saving for dogs with severe acute kidney injury (AKI), however, comorbidities including pancreatitis might affect outcome. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To investigate the prevalence of pancreas-specific lipase (Spec cPL) measurements consistent with pancreatitis (≥400 μg/L) in dogs undergoing intermittent hemodialysis (IHD) for treatment of AKI and to determine whether there were associations between 30-days outcomes and Spec cPL measurements. ANIMALS: Fifty-three client-owned dogs presented to teaching hospitals between November 2008 and September 2016 that underwent IHD. METHODS: Retrospective medical record review from dogs that received IHD for management of AKI and also had a Spec cPL measurement. Association between survival, dialysis-dependency, and Spec cPL measurements was assessed. RESULTS: Forty of 53 (76%) dogs were alive at 30-days and 33/53(62%) had a Spec cPL result ≥400 μg/L. Spec cPL was not significantly different either between surviving (635.5 μg/L, range 29-1,001) and nonsurviving dogs (860 μg/L, range 56-1,001; P = 0.75) or between dialysis-dependent (1,001 μg/L, range 177-1,001) and nondialysis-dependent dogs (520 μg/L, range 29-1,001; P = 0.08). Spec cPL ≥400 μg/L was not significantly associated either with survival (P = 0.74) or dialysis-dependency (P = 0.33). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Results revealed a high prevalence of Spec cPL ≥400 μg/L in dogs with AKI treated with IHD. No significant associations between Spec cPL and survival or dialysis-dependency in dogs with AKI at 30 days were identified in the current study, however, the latter could be due to lack of power in this study.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29469974/