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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Copper and zinc urine levels in dogs given D-penicillamine for liver

By Fieten, H et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2013·Department of Clinical Sciences of Companion Animals, Netherlands·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Urinary excretion of copper, zinc and iron with and without D-penicillamine administration in relation to hepatic copper concentration in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of Beagle and Labrador dogs with hereditary copper-associated hepatitis were studied to see how their bodies excreted copper, zinc, and iron, especially after receiving a medication called D-penicillamine. This medication is used to help remove excess copper from the body. After taking D-penicillamine, the dogs showed a quick increase in the amount of copper and zinc in their urine, but not iron. The study found that while the medication helped with copper excretion, it didn't directly relate to the amount of copper in their livers. However, the urinary copper and zinc levels could be useful for diagnosing and monitoring this condition in Labrador retrievers.

People also search for: dog copper storage disease · D-penicillamine for dogs · Labrador copper toxicity treatment

Abstract

Hereditary copper-associated hepatitis in dogs resembles Wilson's disease, a copper storage disease in humans. Values for urinary copper excretion are well established in the diagnostic protocol of Wilson's disease, whereas in dogs these have not been evaluated. The objectives of this study were to characterize both basal and D-penicillamine induced urinary copper, zinc and iron excretion in dogs in relation to hepatic copper concentration. Beagles, Beagle-Bedlington terrier cross-breeds homozygous for the COMMD1 gene mutation that causes copper toxicosis, and Labrador retrievers with normal or increased hepatic copper concentrations were investigated. The hepatic copper phenotype was determined by histological evaluation of liver biopsies and measurement of the hepatic copper concentration by instrumental neutron activation analysis. Urinary excretion of copper, iron and zinc was measured via inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry under basal conditions and after oral administration of a single dose (20mg/kg bodyweight) of the chelator D-penicillamine. There was a rapid increase in urinary excretion of copper and zinc, but not iron after D-penicillamine administration. This increase was not different between dogs with high or normal hepatic copper concentrations. D-penicillamine-induced urinary copper excretion and the copper/creatinine ratio did not correlate with hepatic copper concentrations in the dogs studied, although basal urinary copper/zinc ratios did correlate with hepatic copper concentrations in Labrador retrievers. The latter parameter may be useful in diagnostic and follow-up protocols for copper-associated hepatitis in Labrador retrievers.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23583003/