Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cardiac troponin I levels in cats with kidney problems
By Langhorn, Rebecca et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2019·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cardiac troponin I in cats with compromised renal function.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats with kidney problems had their blood tested for a protein called cardiac troponin I, which can indicate heart injury. The study found that cats with kidney issues had higher levels of this protein compared to healthy cats, even when they didn't show signs of heart disease. Interestingly, some of these cats also had troponin I in their urine, suggesting that kidney disease might affect how this protein is processed in the body. This means that elevated troponin levels in cats with kidney disease might not always mean there’s a heart problem.
People also search for: cat kidney disease symptoms · elevated troponin in cats · cat heart problems and kidney disease · kidney disease treatment for cats
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Cardiac troponins are sensitive and specific markers of myocardial injury. However, their reliability in renal disease has been questioned owing to possible renal involvement in troponin elimination. The primary objective of the present study was to examine whether serum cardiac troponin I is elevated in cats with compromised renal function and no clinically relevant structural cardiac disease. A secondary objective was to examine whether cardiac troponin I is measurable in the urine of cats with normal and compromised renal function. METHODS: This prospective case-control study included 52 cats (19 with compromised renal function, 19 with primary cardiac disease and 14 healthy controls). For all cats, clinical examination, echocardiography, electrocardiography, blood pressure, complete blood count, biochemistry, serum thyroxine and urinalysis were performed. Cardiac troponin I was measured in the serum and urine of each cat. RESULTS: Median (range) serum cardiac troponin I concentrations were 0.052 ng/ml (0.015-0.78 ng/ml) for the renal group, 0.083 ng/ml (0.003-3.27 ng/ml) for the cardiac group and 0.012 ng/ml (0.003-0.14 ng/ml) for the control group. The renal and cardiac groups both had significantly higher serum cardiac troponin I concentrations than the control group, whereas no difference could be detected between the renal and cardiac groups. In the renal group 7/19 cats had measurable urine cardiac troponin I, whereas cardiac troponin I was measurable in the urine of one cat in the cardiac group and two healthy controls. There was no significant correlation between serum and urine cardiac troponin I. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Elevated serum cardiac troponin I in cats with compromised renal function may occur without evidence of clinically relevant structural cardiac disease. Moreover, detecting cardiac troponin I in urine is most likely in cats with compromised renal function.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31551016/