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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Plasma homocysteine concentrations in healthy horses and horses with atrial fibrillation.

Journal:
Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology
Year:
2018
Authors:
Mitchell, K J et al.
Affiliation:
Equine Department
Species:
horse

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Homocysteine (HCY) is an amino acid produced from methionine metabolism. Plasma homocysteine concentrations ([HCY]) are elevated (>13 μmol/L) in people with atrial fibrillation (AF) and can predict the recurrence of AF after cardioversion. This study aimed to validate a commercially available human HCY assay for use in horses to develop reference intervals for [HCY]and compare [HCY]in healthy horses and horses with AF. ANIMALS: Healthy horses (n = 27) and horses with AF (n = 55, 34 of which were cardioverted using transvenous electrical cardioversion). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Blood samples were analysed for HCY using an automated enzyme-cycling assay (Homocysteine Cobas C, Integra, Roche) and creatinine (compensated Jaffe method). Assay linearity and precision were assessed, reference intervals calculated and [HCY]and creatinine compared between groups. RESULTS: The assay was precise (coefficient of variation 1.6-4.3%, n = 10 repetitions) and provided linear results (r = 0.99 for spiked and natural samples) for a range of [HCY]. The reference interval for [HCY]was 1.5-7.8 μmol/L. The plasma concentration of homocysteine was 4.65 ± 1.5 μmol/L (mean ± standard deviation) in healthy horses and 4.65 ± 1.72 μmol/L in horses with AF (p=0.99); [HCY]was not associated with recurrence of AF (n = 18, p=0.97). A weak, positive correlation between plasma creatinine and [HCY]was detected (r = 0.295, p=0.008, r = 0.11). CONCLUSIONS: This assay allows precise measurement of [HCY]in horses. Unlike in people, [HCY]is not increased in horses with AF and cannot predict AF recurrence. This might be due to differences in the underlying pathological mechanisms of AF development in people and horses.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29861401/