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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Elevated liver enzymes in hyperthyroid cats treated with iodine-131

By Campbell, Joseph et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·BluePearl Veterinary Specialty and Emergency Center, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The Prevalence, Magnitude, and Reversibility of Elevated Liver Enzyme Activities in Hyperthyroid Cats Presenting for Iodine-131 Treatment.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of hyperthyroid cats, including 217 felines, were evaluated before receiving iodine-131 treatment, and over half had elevated liver enzyme levels. The most common enzyme that was high was alanine transaminase. After successful treatment with iodine-131, all the cats showed normal liver enzyme levels during follow-up visits, indicating that the liver issues were reversible. This suggests that elevated liver values in hyperthyroid cats may not require separate investigation, as they typically return to normal once the hyperthyroidism is treated.

People also search for: cat hyperthyroidism treatment · elevated liver enzymes in cats · iodine-131 for cat thyroid problems

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The primary objective of this study was to report the prevalence and magnitude of elevated liver enzyme activity in feline hyperthyroidism using a large cohort of cats presenting for iodine-131 treatment. The secondary objective was to determine if elevated liver enzyme activity was a reversible process following successful iodine-131 treatment. METHODS: Cases that presented for a single iodine-131 treatment were retrospectively reviewed. Short-term and long-term follow-up clinicopathologic data was then reviewed for the secondary objective. RESULTS: Two hundred seventeen hyperthyroid cats met the inclusion criteria for the primary objective. In total, 123/217 (56.7%) of the cats had at least one liver enzyme elevation on their chemistry panel, with alanine transaminase activity being the most common. All cats who were successfully treated with iodine-131 had liver enzyme activity within the reference range at short-term follow-up and long-term follow-up points. CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: Our study demonstrates that elevated liver values are common in cats presenting for iodine-131 treatment. Additionally, our study demonstrates that even when liver values are markedly elevated prior to treatment, the liver enzyme activity will return to normal after successful resolution of hyperthyroidism using iodine-131 treatment. Investigation into hepatobiliary disease and liver function tests for cats with a diagnosis of hyperthyroidism may be unnecessary as the liver values will likely return to normal with successful iodine-131 treatment.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35252423/