Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cytokine changes in blood help diagnose cat mycobacteriosis
By O'Halloran, C et al.·Published in Scientific reports·2018·Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies and The Roslin Institute, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cytokine and Chemokine Concentrations as Biomarkers of Feline Mycobacteriosis.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats with mycobacteriosis, a serious infection that can affect both cats and humans, had their blood tested for specific proteins called cytokines to help diagnose the disease. The study found that certain cytokines were either lower or higher in infected cats compared to healthy ones, which could help vets identify the infection more accurately. While some cytokines showed promise as potential markers for mycobacteriosis, further research is needed to confirm how useful these tests could be in everyday veterinary practice.
People also search for: cat mycobacteriosis symptoms · feline tuberculosis diagnosis · elevated cytokines in cats
Abstract
Mycobacteriosis is an emerging zoonotic disease of domestic cats and timely, accurate diagnosis is currently challenging. To identify differential cytokine/chemokine concentrations in serum/plasma of cats, which could be diagnostic biomarkers of infection we analysed plasma/serum from 116 mycobacteria-infected cats, 16 healthy controls and six cats hospitalised for unrelated reasons was analysed using the Milliplex MAP Feline Cytokine Magnetic Bead multiplex assay. Three cytokines; sFAS, IL-13 and IL-4 were reduced while seven; GM-CSF, IL-2, PDGF-BB, IL-8, KC, RANTES and TNF-α were elevated in mycobacteria-infected cats compared to healthy controls. However, IL-8 and KC concentrations were not significantly different from cats hospitalised for other reasons. Elevations in TNF-α and PDGF-BB may have potential to identify M. bovis and M. microti infected cats specifically while GM-CSF, IL-2 and FLT3L were increased in MTBC infected cats. This study demonstrates potential use of feline tuberculosis as a spontaneously occurring model of this significant human disease. Cytokine profiling has clear diagnostic potential for mycobacteriosis of cats and could be used discriminate tuberculous from non-tuberculous disease to rapidly inform on zoonotic risk. Future work should focus on the in-field utility of these findings to establish diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of these markers.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30470763/