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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Testing for protein C and plasminogen in colicky horses

By Welles, E G et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·1991·Department of Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Use of newly developed assays for protein C and plasminogen in horses with signs of colic.

Species:
horse
Colic in horsesStomach & digestionHorses

Plain-English summary

A group of 100 horses showing signs of colic had their blood tested for protein C and plasminogen levels to see how these might relate to their chances of survival. It was found that horses that did not survive had lower levels of protein C within 2 to 24 hours after being admitted. Horses with serious conditions like strangulating obstructions or those undergoing surgery also showed low levels of these proteins. While the findings suggest that low protein C and plasminogen levels could help predict outcomes in colic cases, more research is needed due to the small number of horses in some groups.

People also search for: horse colic symptoms · colic treatment in horses · protein C levels in horses

Abstract

Protein C content and plasminogen activity were measured in plasma from 100 horses with signs of colic. Data were analyzed by grouping horses 4 ways. Each horse was allotted to 1 of 2 outcome groups (survivors and nonsurvivors), 1 of 3 broad-category diagnosis groups (inflammatory disorders, strangulating obstructions, and all other gastrointestinal disorders), and 1 of 2 clinical management groups (medical and surgical). In a fourth grouping, all horses (although numbers of horses included in each subgroup were small) were assigned either to specific diagnostic groups that had high expectation for activated hemostasis (intestinal ischemia, endotoxemia, jugular thrombosis, peritoneal adhesions, and laminitis) or to a control group, in which active hemostasis was unlikely. Within 2 to 24 hours after admission, nonsurvivors developed lower protein C content than did survivors. Protein C content and plasminogen activity became low during hospitalization in horses with strangulating obstructions and in horses having surgery. The results from the grouping by specific diagnosis must be considered pilot data because the numbers of horses in each subgroup were small. Although not statistically significant, trends were noticed in protein C and plasminogen: (1) horses with intestinal ischemia and endotoxemia developed low protein C content and plasminogen activity, (2) protein C content became low in horses that developed peritoneal adhesions or laminitis, and (3) plasminogen activity became low in horses that developed jugular thrombosis. Low protein C content or low plasminogen activity, or both, may be useful as predictors for outcome and for these specific complications of equine colic.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2012348/