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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Early urine tests to detect kidney damage in dogs bitten by snakes

By Hrovat, A et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2013·Department of Medicine and Clinical Biology of Small Animals·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of snake envenomation-induced renal dysfunction in dogs using early urinary biomarkers of nephrotoxicity.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs that were bitten by poisonous snakes showed signs of kidney problems, which were detected using new urine tests. Traditional tests often missed early signs of kidney damage due to factors like blood in the urine. The study found that levels of certain proteins in the urine were significantly higher in the snake-bitten dogs compared to healthy dogs, indicating kidney issues. These new urine tests could help veterinarians identify dogs needing urgent treatment sooner than before.

People also search for: dog snake bite symptoms · kidney problems in dogs · snake envenomation treatment for dogs

Abstract

Renal dysfunction in dogs envenomed by poisonous snakes is currently detected using traditional serum and urinary biomarkers such as creatinine and proteinuria. However, these markers lack sensitivity at the early stages of renal dysfunction and their diagnostic accuracy is affected by pre-analytical factors commonly occurring in these dogs, such as haemolysis and haemoglobinuria. Early detection of renal dysfunction would allow for the identification of dogs requiring intensive treatment and monitoring and may help inform prognosis. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of several novel urinary biomarkers of glomerular dysfunction, namely, urinary albumin (uAlb), immunoglobulin G (uIgG) and C-reactive protein (uCRP) and of proximal tubular dysfunction (urinary retinol binding protein (uRBP)) compared to traditional end points in dogs with renal damage caused by snake envenomation. Biomarker results were compared between 19 dogs bitten by snakes producing either neurotoxins or cytotoxins and 10 clinically healthy controls. uAlb, uIgG, and uRBP were significantly increased in snake-envenomed dogs at presentation compared to controls, whereas only uIgG and uCRP were significantly elevated 24h post-envenomation. The urinary protein:creatinine ratio was also increased in envenomed dogs compared to controls, but because of the presence of haematuria and haemoglobinuria, differentiation between pre-renal and renal proteinuria was not possible. The results showed that these novel urinary biomarkers may assist in better detecting renal dysfunction in dogs envenomed by poisonous snakes at the acute disease stage compared to traditional laboratory endpoints.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23916665/