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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

C-reactive protein testing for dog gut diseases and care

By Covin, Marshal A. & Steiner, Joerg M.·Published in Veterinary Clinical Pathology·2022·Gastrointestinal Laboratory Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences Texas A&M University College Station TX USA, United States·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Measurement and clinical applications of C‐reactive protein in gastrointestinal diseases of dogs

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with gastrointestinal issues may have elevated levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), which can indicate inflammation in the body. This protein is often measured in dogs suffering from conditions like inflammatory bowel disease, pancreatitis, or parvovirus infection. By monitoring CRP levels, veterinarians can better assess the severity of the dog's condition and track its progress over time. Using consistent testing methods is important for accurate results. Understanding CRP's role in both human and veterinary medicine can help improve treatment strategies for dogs with these health problems.

People also search for: dog gastrointestinal disease symptoms · elevated CRP in dogs · dog inflammatory bowel disease treatment

Abstract

AbstractC‐reactive protein (CRP) is a positive acute‐phase protein, serum concentrations of which increase nonspecifically in response to inflammatory processes of the dog. As such, it can aid in the identification of inflammatory disease and, maybe more importantly, the objective monitoring of disease progression. In dogs, CRP is frequently used to evaluate dogs with gastrointestinal diseases, such as chronic inflammatory enteropathies (also termed idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease), acute pancreatitis, canine parvovirus infection, hepatic disease, acute abdomen, and protein‐losing enteropathy. The diversity of the assays available to measure CRP in dogs is nearly as numerous as the diseases in which serum concentrations of this protein are increased. Assay methodologies include laser nephelometric immunoassays, enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assays, immunoturbidimetric assays, and time‐resolved immunofluorometric assays. While many of these assays are acceptable for clinical use in the dog, the same assay and analyzer should be used to measure a patient's CRP concentration longitudinally. By looking at the uses of CRP in human gastroenterology, including reducing the duration of antibiotic therapy, the veterinary profession can gain insight into novel ways in which serum CRP concentration measurements might be applied in veterinary medicine in the future.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/vcp.13100