Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How NCX-1 heart test tells heart failure from kidney failure in dogs
By Nam, S-J et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2010·School of Veterinary Medicine, South Korea·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The cardiac biomarker sodium-calcium exchanger (NCX-1) can differentiate between heart failure and renal failure: a comparative study of NCX-1 expression in dogs with chronic mitral valvular insufficiency and azotemia.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with heart problems, specifically chronic mitral valvular insufficiency, showed higher levels of a cardiac biomarker called NCX-1 compared to healthy dogs. In contrast, dogs with kidney failure did not have increased NCX-1 levels, suggesting that this biomarker can help differentiate between heart and kidney issues. This means that if your dog has symptoms of heart failure, like coughing or difficulty breathing, a vet might check NCX-1 levels to better understand the problem. The study indicates that kidney issues, like azotemia (high levels of waste in the blood), do not influence NCX-1 levels.
People also search for: dog heart failure symptoms · NCX-1 biomarker in dogs · chronic mitral valvular insufficiency treatment · kidney failure in dogs signs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The sodium-calcium exchanger (NCX-1), an established cardiac biomarker, was postulated previously as differentiating between heart failure (HF) and renal failure (RF) in dogs. The effect of azotemia on NCX-1 expression has not been studied. HYPOTHESIS: In contrast to other cardiac biomarkers (eg, N-terminal-proBNP), we hypothesized that the expression level of NCX-1 is not influenced by either azotemia or decreased renal clearance. ANIMALS: Fifteen client-owned healthy control dogs, 14 dogs with chronic mitral valvular insufficiency (CMVI), classified based on severity of the disease by the established International Small Animal Cardiac Health Council classification system, and 15 dogs with RF, grouped according to the International Renal Interest Society stage classification. METHODS: A comparative study of the expression levels of NCX-1, evaluated in peripheral blood samples from dogs with HF, RF, and healthy controls by quantitative PCR. RESULTS: NCX-1 expression was significantly increased in moderate (2.99±0.61 [fold changes relative to normal group]) to severe (4.35±1.44) CMVI dogs (P<.01). In contrast, NCX-1 expression was not increased in the azotemic dogs. Furthermore, there was also no correlation between increased concentrations of creatinine and urea nitrogen in serum and NCX-1 expression in the RF group. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Azotemia likely does not affect NCX-1 expression.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21054542/