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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Amino acid loss in urine and blood in dogs with hepatocutaneous

By Loftus, John P et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2017·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Characterization of aminoaciduria and hypoaminoacidemia in dogs with hepatocutaneous syndrome.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs diagnosed with hepatocutaneous syndrome (HCS), a serious liver condition, showed low levels of important amino acids in their blood and high levels in their urine. Symptoms included skin lesions and other signs of liver issues. The study found that all dogs had significantly reduced amino acids like glutamine and proline, which are crucial for skin and liver health. Understanding these amino acid imbalances can help veterinarians provide better nutritional support for dogs with HCS.

People also search for: dog skin lesions liver disease · hepatocutaneous syndrome treatment · low amino acids in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To characterize aminoaciduria and plasma amino acid concentrations in dogs with hepatocutaneous syndrome (HCS). ANIMALS 20 client-owned dogs of various breeds and ages. PROCEDURES HCS was definitively diagnosed on the basis of liver biopsy specimens (n = 12), gross and histologic appearance of skin lesions (4), and examination of skin and liver biopsy specimens (2) and presumptively diagnosed on the basis of cutaneous lesions with compatible clinicopathologic and hepatic ultrasonographic (honeycomb or Swiss cheese pattern) findings (2). Amino acid concentrations in heparinized plasma and urine (samples obtained within 8 hours of each other) were measured by use of ion exchange chromatography. Urine creatinine concentration was used to normalize urine amino acid concentrations. Plasma amino acid values were compared relative to mean reference values; urine-corrected amino acid values were compared relative to maximal reference values. RESULTS All dogs had generalized hypoaminoacidemia, with numerous amino acid concentrations < 50% of mean reference values. The most consistent and severe abnormalities involved glutamine, proline, cysteine, and hydroxyproline, and all dogs had marked lysinuria. Urine amino acids exceeding maximum reference values (value > 1.0) included lysine, 1-methylhistidine, and proline. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Hypoaminoacidemia in dogs with HCS prominently involved amino acids associated with the urea cycle and synthesis of glutathione and collagen. Marked lysinuria and prolinuria implicated dysfunction of specific amino acid transporters and wasting of amino acids essential for collagen synthesis. These findings may provide a means for tailoring nutritional support and for facilitating HCS diagnosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28541155/