Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Early urine test spots kidney injury and recovery in dogs
By Palm, C A et al.Ā·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicineĀ·2016Ā·Department of Medicine and Epidemiology, United StatesĀ·View original on PubMed ā
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Original publication title: Urinary Neutrophil Gelatinase-associated Lipocalin as a Marker for Identification of Acute Kidney Injury and Recovery in Dogs with Gentamicin-induced Nephrotoxicity.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of five dogs developed acute kidney injury (AKI) after receiving gentamicin, a common antibiotic. Traditional tests showed kidney problems too late, but a new urine test measuring neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (uNGAL) and its ratio to creatinine (UNCR) detected the injury much earlier. The dogs showed signs of kidney damage within days, and their recovery was tracked through these urine tests, which indicated improvement before traditional blood tests did. This research suggests that uNGAL and UNCR could help vets identify kidney issues sooner and monitor recovery more effectively.
People also search for: dog kidney injury symptoms Ā· gentamicin side effects in dogs Ā· early signs of kidney disease in dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is associated with high mortality rates in dogs, which may be a consequence of late recognition using traditional diagnostic tests. Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) is a protein-induced during kidney injury that may identify AKI earlier than traditional tests. OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: To evaluate urinary NGAL (uNGAL) and uNGAL-to-urinary creatinine ratio (UNCR) as early markers of kidney injury and recovery in an AKI model in dogs. It was hypothesized that these markers would document AKI earlier than serum creatinine concentration. ANIMALS: Five purpose-bred dogs. METHODS: Prospective study. Acute kidney injury, defined as a > 50% increase in serum creatinine concentration above baseline, was induced in dogs by gentamicin administration (8-10 mg/kg SC q8h). Blood and urine collected for biochemical analyses and uNGAL and urinary creatinine concentrations, respectively, during AKI induction and recovery. RESULTS: Acute kidney injury was diagnosed significantly earlier based on a 7-fold increase in UNCR compared to a > 50% increase in serum creatinine concentration (day 8; range, 2-10 mg/dl vs day 16; range, 14-19 mg/dl; P = .009). During recovery, the initial decrease in UNCR preceded the decrease in serum creatinine concentration by a median of 2 days. The uNGAL changes paralleled UNCR changes, but the increase in uNGAL was triphasic; the initial peak occurred earlier than UNCR (median, day 11 versus median, day 19). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: The UNCR was early marker of gentamicin-induced AKI and its decrease documented onset of renal recovery. Additional studies are needed to validate this marker in dogs with naturally occurring renal injury.
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Search related cases āOriginal publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26725776/