Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Heart protein levels predict 1-year survival in critically ill dogs
By Langhorn, R et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2014·Department of Veterinary Clinical and Animal Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Prediction of long-term outcome by measurement of serum concentration of cardiac troponins in critically ill dogs with systemic inflammation.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 38 critically ill dogs with signs of systemic inflammation were monitored for heart injury using blood tests that measured cardiac troponins (cTnI and cTnT). The study found that higher levels of these markers were linked to a greater risk of death within a year, with nearly half of the dogs not surviving. While the tests showed some promise in identifying dogs at risk, they were not reliable enough to predict individual outcomes. This means that while elevated troponin levels can indicate a higher risk, they can't definitively tell you if a specific dog will survive long-term.
People also search for: dog heart injury symptoms · elevated troponin levels in dogs · critically ill dog prognosis · systemic inflammation in dogs · dog ICU care outcomes
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Myocardial injury, detected by cardiac troponin I and T (cTnI and cTnT), has been associated with long-term death in the noncardiac human intensive care unit (ICU). HYPOTHESIS: Presence of myocardial injury predicts 1-year case fatality in critically ill dogs with systemic inflammation. ANIMALS: Thirty-eight dogs with evidence of systemic inflammation and no primary cardiac disease. METHODS: Prospective cohort study. In dogs admitted to the ICU with evidence of systemic inflammation, blood samples were obtained at ICU admission for measurement of cTnI and cTnT, and cTnI was measured once daily during ICU hospitalization. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to examine prognostic capacity of admission cTnI, admission cTnT, and peak cTnI concentrations. RESULTS: One-year case fatality rate was 47% (18/38 dogs). Admission cTnI concentrations were (median [range]) 0.48 [0.004-141.50] ng/mL, and peak cTnI concentrations were 1.21 [0.021-141.50] ng/mL. Admission cTnT concentrations were 15 [<13-3744] ng/L. For each marker, non-survivors had significantly higher concentrations than survivors (P = .0082-.038). ROC analyses revealed areas under curves [95% CI] of 0.707 [0.537-0.843] for peak cTnI and 0.739 [0.571-0.867] for admission cTnT, respectively. At the optimal cut-off, concentrations were 1.17 ng/mL (peak cTnI) and 23 ng/L (admission cTnT), sensitivities were 72% and 72%, and specificities were 70% and 80%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: While peak cTnI and admission cTnT are significantly related to 1-year case fatality in critically ill dogs with systemic inflammation, low sensitivities and specificities prevent their prediction of long-term outcome in individual patients. Troponins might play a role in identification of dogs at long-term risk of death.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25041343/