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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Liver test changes in hyperthyroid cats before and after 131I

By Berent, Allyson C et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2007·Department of Clinical Studies Small Animal Internal Medicinel/Interventional Radiology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Liver function in cats with hyperthyroidism before and after 131I therapy.

Species:
cat
Feline hyperthyroidismStomach & digestionCats

Plain-English summary

A group of 19 cats with hyperthyroidism, some showing high liver enzyme levels, were treated with radioactive iodine (131I) therapy to see if their liver function improved. After treatment, the cats' liver enzyme levels returned to normal, indicating that the high levels were likely due to the hyperthyroidism rather than liver damage. Additionally, the cats had higher ammonia levels and lower cholesterol and glucose levels before treatment, which also improved afterward. This suggests that extensive testing for liver disease in hyperthyroid cats may not be needed.

People also search for: cat hyperthyroidism treatment · high liver enzymes in cats · radioactive iodine therapy for cats

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The clinical significance of high serum concentration or activity of markers of liver damage in cats with hyperthyroidism is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate serum markers of liver function and damage, and ultrasonographic changes in cats with hyperthyroidism and with high liver enzymes, and to determine if abnormalities resolve after treatment with 131I. ANIMALS: Nineteen cats with hyperthyroidism (15 with high serum activities of liver enzymes) and 4 age-matched healthy control cats. METHODS: Serum bile acids, albumin, ammonia, cholesterol, and blood urea nitrogen concentrations, and activities of liver-derived enzymes, and blood glucose concentrations were measured before and after 131I therapy. These values were compared with those of cats that were euthyroid. In addition, gross liver parenchymal changes detected by abdominal ultrasonographic examination, before and after 131I therapy were evaluated. RESULTS: High serum liver enzyme activities were not associated with abnormalities in hepatic parenchyma and liver functional variables, regardless of the degree of increase. Serum liver enzyme activities return to normal after control of hyperthyroidism with 131I therapy. Cats with hyperthyroidism have a significantly higher serum fasting ammonia concentration than cats who were euthyroid (P = .019). Cats with hyperthyroidism also have significantly lower serum cholesterol (P = .005) and glucose (P = .002) concentrations before compared with after 131I therapy. Nine of 19 cats with hyperthyroidism had trace ketonuria. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: These results demonstrate that extensive examination for hepatobiliary disease in most cats with hyperthyroidism is unnecessary.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18196729/