PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Urinary indices for differentiation of prerenal azotemia and renal azotemia in horses.

Journal:
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
Year:
1982
Authors:
Grossman, B S et al.
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

In a study involving 16 horses with a condition called acute azotemia, researchers looked at different urine tests to help tell apart two types of kidney issues: prerenal azotemia (which is often due to dehydration or low blood flow to the kidneys) and renal azotemia (which is caused by actual damage to the kidneys). They found that certain urine and blood ratios were significantly different between the two groups of horses. For instance, horses with renal azotemia had lower ratios of urine urea nitrogen to plasma urea nitrogen compared to those with prerenal azotemia. The study concluded that these urine tests can be helpful for veterinarians in quickly identifying the type of kidney problem and planning the right treatment for horses with acute azotemia.

Abstract

The urine urea nitrogen/plasma urea nitrogen ratio (Uun/Pun), urine creatinine/plasma creatinine ratio (Ucr/Pcr), urine osmolality/plasma osmolality ratio (Uosm/Posm), and fractional excretion of filtered sodium (FENa) were evaluated in 16 horses with acute azotemia to ascertain the significance of each index in the differentiation of prerenal azotemia from renal azotemia. Renal azotemia was diagnosed when renal biopsy or postmortem histologic examination demonstrated evidence of organic renal disease or when azotemia was found in the presence of isosthenuria. The diagnosis of prerenal azotemia was based on the absence of renal histologic lesions or stabilization of blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine soon after therapy. In 10 horses with renal azotemia, Uun/Pun was 2.1-14.3, Ucr/Pcr was 2.6-37.0, Uosm/Posm was 0.8-1.7, and FENa was 0.08-10.0. In 6 horses with prerenal azotemia, Uun/Pun was 15.2-43.7, Ucr/Pcr was 51.2-241.5, Uosm/Posm was 1.7-3.4, and FENa was 0.02-0.50. The values for each of these indices differed significantly between the 2 groups of horses (P less than 0.05). It was concluded that these indices were of value in the early classification of renal failure in the horse and that this information could be utilized in planning of therapy of acute azotemia in the horse.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7056677/