Abstract

Objective of this study was to demonstrate the ubiquitous presence of glucose in urine of euglycemic cats by a highly sensitive glucose assay. The local electronic database was searched for results of quantitative urine glucose measurements in cats. A total of 325 feline urine glucose measurements were identified, of which 303 (93%) had been submitted by one of the co‐authors working in a near‐by small animal practice. After the exclusion of patients with kidney disease (n = 60), hyperthyroidism (n = 15), diabetes mellitus (n = 11), multiple diseases (n = 9) or steroid treatment (n = 3), as well as serial measurements (n = 87) and outliers (n = 8), the final study population consisted of 132 cats. Urine creatinine concentration was unavailable in five patients. Whereas all but one cat had glucose concentrations above the detection limit of the assay (0.11 mmol/L, Gluco‐quant Enzyme Kit/Roche Diagnostics), no positive glucose dipstick test result (Combur 9‐Test, Roche Diagnostics) was observed. The median (range) of urinary glucose concentration and the glucose‐to‐creatinine ratio (UGCR) was 0.389 (<0.11–1.665) mmol/L and 0.0258 (0.007–0.517) respectively. The UGCR was not affected by age, gender, breed or leukocyturia, whereas cats with hematuria had slightly higher values. Data show that so‐called “basal glucosuria” is present in the majority of cats and by no means diagnostic for diabetes mellitus or renal glucosuria. This has to be considered when using bio‐analytical methods with a low limit of quantification.

Highlights

  • Urine glucose measurement is an integral part of routine urinalysis (Reine & Langston, 2005) and essential for the diagnostic workup of cats with polyuria, polydipsia and weight loss

  • Data of this study confirm that, as has already been shown in hu‐ mans (Fine, 1965; Rave et al, 2006; Wolf et al, 2009; Brunner et al, 2015) and a small cohort of non‐diabetic obese cats (Hoenig, Clark, Schaeffer, & Reiche, 2018), glucosuria is present in euglycemic cats

  • The presence of small amounts of glucose in feline urine is by no means diagnostic for diabetes mellitus or renal glucosuria

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Urine glucose measurement is an integral part of routine urinalysis (Reine & Langston, 2005) and essential for the diagnostic workup of cats with polyuria, polydipsia and weight loss. Up to blood glucose concentrations of about 14.98 mmol/L (270 mg/dl) tubular reabsorption of filtered glu‐ cose is linear and almost complete (Eggleton & Shuster, 1954) This “renal threshold,” which has a wide interindividual variation, lin‐ earity is lost and the proximal convoluted tubules continue to reabsorb glucose at a maximum rate, reabsorption declines below 50% (Eggleton & Shuster, 1954). At this point, urinary glucose con‐ centrations increase and may become detectable depending on the analytical method employed. The subsequent aim was to investigate possible influ‐ encing factors

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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