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Relationship of plasma N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide concentrations to heart failure classification and cause of respiratory distress in dogs using a 2nd generation ELISA assay.

Authors :
Fox PR
Oyama MA
Hezzell MJ
Rush JE
Nguyenba TP
DeFrancesco TC
Lehmkuhl LB
Kellihan HB
Bulmer B
Gordon SG
Cunningham SM
MacGregor J
Stepien RL
Lefbom B
Adin D
Lamb K
Source :
Journal of veterinary internal medicine [J Vet Intern Med] 2015 Jan; Vol. 29 (1), pp. 171-9. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Oct 10.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: Cardiac biomarkers provide objective data that augments clinical assessment of heart disease (HD).<br />Hypothesis/objectives: Determine the utility of plasma N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide concentration [NT-proBNP] measured by a 2nd generation canine ELISA assay to discriminate cardiac from noncardiac respiratory distress and evaluate HD severity.<br />Animals: Client-owned dogs (n = 291).<br />Methods: Multicenter, cross-sectional, prospective investigation. Medical history, physical examination, echocardiography, and thoracic radiography classified 113 asymptomatic dogs (group 1, n = 39 without HD; group 2, n = 74 with HD), and 178 with respiratory distress (group 3, n = 104 respiratory disease, either with or without concurrent HD; group 4, n = 74 with congestive heart failure [CHF]). HD severity was graded using International Small Animal Cardiac Health Council (ISACHC) and ACVIM Consensus (ACVIM-HD) schemes without knowledge of [NT-proBNP] results. Receiver-operating characteristic curve analysis assessed the capacity of [NT-proBNP] to discriminate between dogs with cardiac and noncardiac respiratory distress. Multivariate general linear models containing key clinical variables tested associations between [NT-proBNP] and HD severity.<br />Results: Plasma [NT-proBNP] (median; IQR) was higher in CHF dogs (5,110; 2,769-8,466 pmol/L) compared to those with noncardiac respiratory distress (1,287; 672-2,704 pmol/L; P < .0001). A cut-off >2,447 pmol/L discriminated CHF from noncardiac respiratory distress (81.1% sensitivity; 73.1% specificity; area under curve, 0.84). A multivariate model comprising left atrial to aortic ratio, heart rate, left ventricular diameter, end-systole, and ACVIM-HD scheme most accurately associated average plasma [NT-proBNP] with HD severity.<br />Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Plasma [NT-proBNP] was useful for discriminating CHF from noncardiac respiratory distress. Average plasma [NT-BNP] increased significantly as a function of HD severity using the ACVIM-HD classification scheme.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 by the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1939-1676
Volume :
29
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of veterinary internal medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25308881
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.12472