Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Portable blood ketone meter tested for diabetic cats
By Weingart, Christiane et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2012·Small Animal Clinic, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Validation of a portable hand-held whole-blood ketone meter for use in cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 62 cats, including 51 with diabetes, were tested using a new portable ketone meter to measure ketone levels in their blood. This meter could help detect high ketone levels, which can indicate a serious condition called diabetic ketoacidosis. While the meter worked well for lower ketone levels, it sometimes underestimated higher levels. Overall, the portable meter proved to be a useful tool for veterinarians in diagnosing and managing diabetes in cats.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Urinary dipsticks are the most frequent method used for screening of ketones in animals, but this method has many drawbacks. In human medicine, portable meters that measure ketones in whole blood have largely replaced urinary dipsticks. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this prospective study was to validate a portable whole-blood ketone meter for use in cats. METHODS: Sixty-two cats (11 clinically healthy, 51 with diabetes mellitus) were included in the study. The concentration of β-hydroxybuyrate (β-HB) was measured in venous and capillary blood with a hand-held ketone meter (Precision Xceed; assay range 0-8 mmol/L) and compared with a spectrophotometric method. Precision, accuracy, and the effects of hematocrit and anticoagulants were evaluated. RESULTS: Between-run precision using low- and high-concentration control solutions was 8.1% and 2.6%, respectively; within-run coefficient of variation determined using 12 feline blood samples was 2.8%. In the 62 cats, β-HB concentrations measured with the portable ketone meter ranged from 0-7.4 mmol/L (median 0.9 mmol/L). When β-HB concentrations measured by the portable meter were < 4.0 mmol/L there was good agreement with the reference method, but concentrations > 4.0 mmol/L were lower than those obtained by the reference method in 20 of 24 cats (83%). There was good correlation between capillary and venous measurements. Results were not affected by hematocrits from 0.17 to 0.50 L/L, but EDTA was not a suitable anticoagulant. CONCLUSION: Measurement of β-HB concentration in peripheral or capillary blood by an easy-to-use portable ketone meter was suitable for detecting ketonemia in cats. Underestimation of β-HB concentration was observed at higher values, but results were sufficiently high to aid in diagnosing diabetic ketoacidosis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22250845/