Abstract

To determine whether cats in the nonazotemic stages of chronic kidney disease have increased plasma parathyroid hormone (PTH) concentrations as a compensatory physiologic mechanism to maintain plasma phosphate concentration within the reference interval. Prospective longitudinal study. 118 client-owned geriatric cats with various degrees of renal function. For each cat, a blood sample was obtained for plasma biochemical analysis and determination of plasma PTH concentration, and a urine sample was obtained for determination of urine specific gravity at study entry (baseline) and after 12 months. For a subset of 30 cats, plasma calcitriol concentration was determined at baseline. Cats were categorized into 1 of 3 groups on the basis of kidney function at the end of 12 months. At baseline and after 12 months, plasma concentrations of variables associated with calcium homeostasis were compared between the 3 groups and also within groups over time. Multivariable linear regression was used to identify variables associated with plasma PTH concentration. Plasma PTH concentration was significantly increased in cats that developed azotemia, compared with PTH concentration in cats that remained nonazotemic, and PTH concentration increased before changes in plasma calcium and phosphate concentrations were detected. A moderate positive association between plasma calcitriol and PTH concentrations was identified. Plasma PTH concentration was associated with age and plasma urea, creatinine, and total calcium concentrations in the final multivariable model. Results suggested that renal secondary hyperparathyroidism can develop prior to azotemia in cats, even in the absence of hyperphosphatemia and hypocalcemia.

Highlights

  • Plasma parathyroid hormone (PTH) concentration was significantly increased in cats that developed azotemia, compared with PTH concentration in cats that remained nonazotemic, and PTH concentration increased before changes in plasma calcium and phosphate concentrations were detected

  • Relevance—Results suggested that renal secondary hyperparathyroidism can develop prior to azotemia in cats, even in the absence of hyperphosphatemia and hypocalcemia. (J Am Vet Med Assoc 2012;241:1326–1335)

  • An increased concentration of plasma PTH is associated with CKD in many species and is known as renal secondary hyperparathyroidism

Read more

Summary

Methods

Animals—Clinically normal geriatric cats > 9 years of age with plasma creatinine concentrations < 2.0 mg/ dL were recruited into a prospective longitudinal study from 2 veterinary practices in London. The study was approved by the Royal Veterinary College Ethics and Welfare Committee, and owner consent was obtained for all cats before study enrollment. A cat was excluded from the study if it had any concurrent medical disorder, had evidence of renal lymphoma, was fed a proteinor phosphate-restricted diet, or was receiving drugs known to affect calcium or phosphate homeostasis

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call