Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Signs and lab results in young border collies with inherited low
By Lutz, Sabina et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2013·Clinic for Small Animal Internal Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical and laboratory findings in border collies with presumed hereditary juvenile cobalamin deficiency.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Four young Border Collies, aged between 8 and 42 months, were brought in with symptoms like tiredness, poor body condition, and difficulty swallowing. They were diagnosed with a rare inherited condition called juvenile cobalamin deficiency, which led to low vitamin B12 levels and some blood abnormalities. The good news is that all the dogs fully recovered after receiving regular vitamin B12 injections. While some lab issues remained, the dogs showed significant improvement overall. If you notice similar symptoms in your Border Collie, it might be worth discussing cobalamin deficiency with your vet.
People also search for: Border Collie lethargy · cobalamin deficiency treatment for dogs · puppy poor body condition
Abstract
Juvenile cobalamin deficiency is a rare disease in border collies and its diagnosis requires a high level of clinical suspicion. The goal of this study was to increase awareness of this disease by describing the clinical and laboratory findings in four young border collies with inherited cobalamin deficiency. The median age of the dogs was 11.5 mo (range, 8-42 mo), and two of the four dogs were full siblings. Clinical signs included intermittent lethargy (n = 4), poor body condition (n = 4), odynophagia (n = 2), glossitis (n = 1), and bradyarrhythmia (n = 1). Pertinent laboratory abnormalities were mild to moderate normocytic nonregenerative anemia (n = 3), increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activity (n = 3), and mild proteinuria (n = 3). All of the dogs had serum cobalamin levels below the detection limit of the assay, marked methylmalonic aciduria, and hyperhomocysteinemia. Full clinical recovery was achieved in all dogs with regular parenteral cobalamin supplementation, and laboratory abnormalities resolved, except the proteinuria and elevated AST activity persisted. This case series demonstrates the diverse clinical picture of primary cobalamin deficiency in border collies. Young border collies presenting with ambiguous clinical signs should be screened for cobalamin deficiency.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23535754/