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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cobalamin and methylmalonic acid levels in hyperthyroid cats

By Geesaman, B M et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2016·Department of Medical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Serum Cobalamin and Methylmalonic Acid Concentrations in Hyperthyroid Cats Before and After Radioiodine Treatment.

Species:
cat
Feline hyperthyroidismStomach & digestionCats

Plain-English summary

A group of 39 hyperthyroid cats was studied to see if they had low levels of vitamin B12 (cobalamin) and if this improved after treatment with radioiodine. Only 5 of the cats had low cobalamin levels, and in 2 of those, the levels returned to normal after treatment. The study found that low cobalamin levels were not common in these cats and did not seem to be linked to their hyperthyroid condition. Therefore, most hyperthyroid cats without gastrointestinal issues do not need extra vitamin B12.

People also search for: hyperthyroid cat treatment · cat low vitamin B12 symptoms · radioiodine for hyperthyroid cats

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hyperthyroidism, the most common endocrine disorder in cats, has been associated with low serum cobalamin concentrations. Whether this is a functional cobalamin deficiency of clinical importance has not been assessed. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: Cats with hyperthyroidism experience a functional cobalamin deficiency which correlates with their clinical catabolic state and is reversible with return of the euthyroid state. ANIMALS: Thirty-nine client-owned hyperthyroid cats. METHODS: Prospective observational study. Serum cobalamin, methylmalonic acid, and clinical scores were determined in each hyperthyroid cat at enrollment and when euthyroid (60 days after radioiodine treatment). RESULTS: Five of the 39 hyperthyroid cats (13%) had a low serum cobalamin concentration ranging from <150 to 290 ng/L. Serum cobalamin concentrations normalized to >350 ng/L in 2 of the hypocobalaminemic cats once euthyroid. None of the hyperthyroid/hypocobalaminemic cats had increased serum methylmalonic acid concentrations (175-601 nmol/L). In cats with clinical and biochemical hyperthyroidism, there was no correlation between serum cobalamin concentrations with total T4 concentration (P = .12) or clinical scores including body weight (P = .11) and BCS (P = .54). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: In this population of hyperthyroid cats, the prevalence of hypocobalaminemia was low. Specifically, hyperthyroid cats, in which concurrent gastrointestinal disease is unlikely. Hypocobalaminemia is not a functional deficiency requiring supplementation in hyperthyroid cats without gastrointestinal disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26934857/