Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with high creatine kinase enzyme but no symptoms
By Gunther, Melissa et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2021·Department of Specialty Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Case Report: Persistent Moderate-to-Severe Creatine Kinase Enzyme Activity Elevation in a Subclinical Dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 4-year-old male mixed breed dog was found to have a significantly elevated level of a muscle enzyme (creatine kinase) during a routine check-up, even though he showed no signs of illness like lethargy or weakness. Despite the high enzyme levels, the dog's physical exams remained normal over the next five years. The vet tested for possible infections and treated him with an antibiotic, but the enzyme levels stayed high. Further tests like an echocardiogram were normal, and the owner chose not to pursue additional tests. The dog appears healthy overall, but the cause of the elevated enzyme levels remains unclear.
People also search for: dog high creatine kinase levels · mixed breed dog routine check-up · dog muscle enzyme treatment
Abstract
A 4-year-old, male-castrated, mixed breed dog was presented for a routine wellness examination at which time a moderate increase in serum creatine kinase (CK) enzyme activity (hyperCKemia) (15,137 IU/L; reference interval 10-200 IU/L), and moderate increases in alanine transaminase and aspartate aminotransferase enzyme activities were first identified. There was no history of clinical abnormalities (e.g., lethargy, lameness, anorexia, dysphagia, weakness, gait abnormalities, or exercise intolerance) and the physical examination was unremarkable. The dog was screened for several relevant potential infectious diseases known to cause inflammatory myopathies and was treated empirically with clindamycin. The serum total CK enzyme activity remained increased, which prompted recommendations for an echocardiogram, electromyogram (EMG), and muscle biopsy acquisition. The echocardiogram and electrocardiographic monitoring were unremarkable. The EMG and muscle biopsies were declined by the owner. The dog was evaluated several times in the subsequent 5 years and remained subclinical with unremarkable physical examinations despite a persistent moderate-to-severe hyperCKemia. Differential diagnoses considered most likely in this dog were an occult/latent hereditary muscular dystrophic disorder or idiopathic hyperCKemia, a phenomenon not yet reported in the veterinary literature. This report describes for the first time, clinical and diagnostic features of a subclinical dog with persistent moderate-to-severe hyperCKemia.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34760961/