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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Platelet tests linked to severity of chronic gut disease in dogs

By Mehain, S O et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2019·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Platelet indices as biomarkers for characterization and determination of severity in canine chronic enteropathy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with chronic diarrhea and weight loss, signs of chronic enteropathy (a type of inflammatory bowel disease), were studied to see if certain blood platelet measurements could help determine the severity of their condition. Researchers found that one specific measurement, called platelet component distribution width, was significantly different in dogs with chronic enteropathy compared to healthy dogs. Additionally, higher platelet counts and lower platelet dry mass distribution widths were linked to more severe symptoms. These findings suggest that measuring platelet indices could be useful for veterinarians in assessing and managing dogs with chronic enteropathy.

People also search for: dog chronic diarrhea treatment · dog weight loss causes · inflammatory bowel disease in dogs

Abstract

Human studies have shown an association between certain platelet indices and active inflammatory bowel disease when compared to healthy controls. The objectives of this retrospective study were to determine if any platelet indices differ between dogs with chronic enteropathies and healthy age- and sex-matched control dogs and are predictive of the severity of chronic enteropathy based on canine chronic enteropathy clinical activity index (CCECAI) scores. Medical records for 22 chronic enteropathy-positive dogs and 22 healthy control dogs were reviewed for historical and physical examination findings, platelet indices, and histologic diagnoses of chronic enteropathy. Platelet indices were compared between the groups, and an association between platelet indices and CCECAI scores in dogs with chronic enteropathy was investigated. Chronic diarrhea and weight loss were common clinical signs associated with chronic enteropathy. Lymphoplasmacytic enteritis was the most common histologic diagnosis. Only one platelet index, platelet component distribution width (P =  0.045), was found to be significantly different between the groups. For predicting severity of disease, determined by CCECAI score, statistically significant differences in indices associated with higher scores were platelet count (P = 0.024) and platelet dry mass distribution width (P =  0.036). Only platelet component distribution width showed potential in characterizing dogs with chronic enteropathy compared to normal dogs. Elevated platelet count and decreased platelet dry mass distribution width had a significant effect on total CCECAI scores. These findings suggest further investigation into the utility of platelet indices as predictors of disease presence and severity in dogs with chronic enteropathy is warranted.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31113560/