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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vacuolar hepatopathy in 336 dogs linked to steroid hormone excess

By Sepesy, Lisa M et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2006·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Vacuolar hepatopathy in dogs: 336 cases (1993-2005).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 336 dogs with liver issues were found to have a condition called vacuolar hepatopathy (VH), which can cause liver cells to swell. Many of these dogs had high levels of a liver enzyme called alkaline phosphatase, indicating liver stress. The study revealed that some dogs had underlying diseases like cancer or liver problems, and exposure to steroid hormones was linked to more severe cases of VH. If your dog has been diagnosed with VH, it's important to investigate other potential health issues, especially if they haven't been treated with steroids.

People also search for: dog liver disease symptoms · high alkaline phosphatase in dogs · vacuolar hepatopathy treatment in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine disorders associated with vacuolar hepatopathy (VH), morphologic hepatic and clinicopathologic abnormalities, and affiliation with steroidogenic hormone excess in dogs. DESIGN: Retrospective case series. Animals-336 dogs with histologically confirmed moderate or severe VH. PROCEDURES: Information on signalment, results of diagnostic testing, definitive diagnoses, and exposure to glucocorticoids (ie, exogenous glucocorticoid administration or high endogenous concentrations of steroidogenic hormones) was obtained from medical records. Dogs were grouped by underlying disorder, glucocorticoid exposure, acinar zonal distribution of lesions, and histologic severity. RESULTS: 12 disease groups (neoplastic, acquired hepatobiliary, neurologic, immune-mediated, gastrointestinal tract, renal, infectious, cardiac disease, diabetes mellitus, portosystemic vascular anomaly, adrenal gland dysfunction, and miscellaneous disorders) were identified. There were 186 (55%) dogs with and 150 (45%) dogs without evidence of glucocorticoid exposure. Acinar zonal distribution of hepatic vacuolation and clinicopathologic values did not differ between dogs with and without evidence of glucocorticoid exposure. However, a 3-fold increased likelihood of severe VH was associated with steroidogenic hormone exposure. Of 226 dogs with high serum alkaline phosphatase activity, 102 (45%) had no evidence of glucocorticoid exposure. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggest that neoplasia and congenital or acquired hepatobiliary disease are common in dogs with VH and provide support for the suggestion that VH, high alkaline phosphatase activity, and illness-invoked physiologic stress may be associated. Histologic confirmation of VH should initiate a diagnostic search for a primary disease if glucocorticoid treatment and hyperadrenocorticism are ruled out.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16842046/