Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Easy Dal blood type test for Doberman and Dalmatian dogs
By Véran, Emilie & Blais, Marie-Claude·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2023·Dé, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Validation of a cage-side agglutination card for Dal blood typing in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at a new cage-side test for blood typing in dogs, specifically for Dal-negative breeds like Doberman Pinschers and Dalmatians, which can be hard to match with compatible blood. The test showed good accuracy overall, but it struggled with severely anemic dogs, where it misidentified some blood types. The researchers found that the test works best when the dog's packed cell volume (PCV) is above 20%. While the test can be a helpful tool, veterinarians should be careful when using it for dogs with low blood cell counts.
People also search for: dog blood typing test · Doberman Pinscher blood type · anemia in dogs treatment
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although 98% of the canine population is Dal-positive, Dal-negative dogs are more common in some breeds such as Doberman Pinschers (42.4%) and Dalmatians (11.7%), and finding compatible blood for these breeds may be challenging, given limited access to Dal blood typing. OBJECTIVES: To validate a cage-side agglutination card for Dal blood typing and determine the lowest packed cell volume (PCV threshold) at which interpretation remains accurate. ANIMALS: One-hundred fifty dogs, including 38 blood donors, 52 Doberman Pinschers, 23 Dalmatians and 37 anemic dogs. Three additional Dal-positive canine blood donors were included to establish the PCV threshold. METHODS: Dal blood typing was performed on blood samples preserved in ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) <48 hours using the cage-side agglutination card and a gel column technique (gold standard). The PCV threshold was determined using plasma-diluted blood samples. All results were read by 2 observers, blinded to each other's interpretation and to the sample's origin. RESULTS: Interobserver agreement was 98% and 100% using the card and gel column assays, respectively. Overall, the sensitivity and specificity of the cards were 86%-87.6% and 96.6%-100%, respectively, depending on the observer. However, 18 samples were mistyped using the agglutination cards (15/18 by both observers): 1 false-positive (Doberman Pinscher), and 17 false-negative samples including 13 anemic dogs (PCV range, 5%-24%; median, 13%). The PCV threshold allowing reliable interpretation was determined to be >20%. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Dal agglutination cards are reliable as a cage-side test, but results should be interpreted cautiously in severely anemic patients.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36862049/