Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Nutritional care for a dog with liver enzyme and copper issues
By Poblanno Silva, Francisco Manuel et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2023·Department of Clinical Studies, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Nutritional management of a dog with hepatic enzymopathy suspected to be secondary to copper-associated hepatitis: a case report.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 4-year-old female American Bulldog was brought in for high liver enzyme levels, suspected to be due to copper-associated hepatitis. After testing, the vet found elevated copper levels in her liver and recommended a special homemade diet to support her liver health. The dog was also given a medication called ursodeoxycholic acid. Just two days later, her liver enzyme levels returned to normal, and she continued to do well on the new diet, which was balanced and low in copper. Two months later, her bloodwork remained normal, and she showed no adverse effects from the diet.
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Abstract
A 4-year-old, female-spayed American Bulldog presented to the Ontario Veterinary College's Health Sciences Center's Clinical Nutrition Service for nutritional management of hepatic enzymopathy and suspected copper-associated hepatitis. Medical history revealed a 3-month history of gradually increasing serum ALT. Additional diagnostics included negativetitters, normal bile acids, and laparoscopic liver biopsy. Histopathology findings were consistent with diffuse moderate vacuole hepatocellular degeneration, mild positive copper staining, mild chronic lymphoplasmacytic hepatitis both portal and central, and mild biliary hyperplasia. Hepatic copper quantification results were above normal ranges (630 μg/g dry tissue), but below those seen in familial copper-associated hepatitis (>800-1,000 μg/g dry tissue). The patient was prescribed ursodeoxycholic acid, recommended to be fed a homemade diet (HMD), and referred for a nutrition consult. Two days before the nutrition consult, serum ALT fell within the normal range. The body condition score was 5/9, with a good muscle condition score and the dog's appetite and body weight remained stable. Energy intake was appropriate for maintenance. Key nutrient levels of all diets reported were compared to industry standards (AAFCO, NRC, and FEDIAF). Diet history included a commercially available raw meat-based diet (RMBD), of unknown copper content; a high energy commercial dry food (HEC), with copper content higher than the maximum recommended by FEDIAF and immediately prior to nutrition consult the patient had been eating an unbalanced homemade diet (HMD1) for 4 weeks. HMD1 was low in copper and deficient in the hepatoprotectant nutrients vitamin E and zinc. As per the owner's preference and to accommodate the patient's unique nutritional needs, a homemade diet addressing key nutrients for liver disease was formulated (HMD2), with copper content just above the recommended minimum. The new diet was found palatable and the patient's body weight, body, and muscle condition scores remained unchanged. Two months after starting HMD2, all bloodwork values remained within the normal range, including ALT. The reduction of dietary copper content likely reduced serum ALT. However, unbalanced diets cause a risk of nutrient deficiencies and excess. This dog was maintained with no known adverse effects on a complete and balanced HMD diet with a moderately low copper content, moderate protein, and inclusion of hepatoprotective nutrients.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38146497/