Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasis

Abstract Background We aimed to identify a simple test for excessive calciuresis and predict calcium oxalate (CaOx) disease in Miniature Schnauzers. We investigated the impact of postprandial time on the urine calcium to creatinine ratio (UCa/Cr) in male dogs of this breed, with the goal of improvin...

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Main Authors: Susan V. Carr, David C. Grant, Stefanie M. DeMonaco, Megan Shepherd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-03-01
Series:Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15690
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spelling doaj-c733f2b9e5d945d58393a7180d3702f02020-11-25T00:47:57ZengWileyJournal of Veterinary Internal Medicine0891-66401939-16762020-03-0134275476010.1111/jvim.15690Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasisSusan V. Carr0David C. Grant1Stefanie M. DeMonaco2Megan Shepherd3Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences Virginia‐Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, Virginia Tech Blacksburg VirginiaDepartment of Small Animal Clinical Sciences Virginia‐Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, Virginia Tech Blacksburg VirginiaDepartment of Small Animal Clinical Sciences Virginia‐Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, Virginia Tech Blacksburg VirginiaDepartment of Large Animal Clinical Sciences Virginia‐Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, Virginia Tech Blacksburg VirginiaAbstract Background We aimed to identify a simple test for excessive calciuresis and predict calcium oxalate (CaOx) disease in Miniature Schnauzers. We investigated the impact of postprandial time on the urine calcium to creatinine ratio (UCa/Cr) in male dogs of this breed, with the goal of improving the utility of the UCa/Cr. Hypotheses (1) Significant differences will exist in preprandial and postprandial UCa/Cr between CaOx urolith‐forming and control Schnauzers. (2) The UCa/Cr will increase significantly from the first morning baseline at ≥1 postprandial time point(s) in both control and CaOx urolith‐forming dogs. (3) Biochemical abnormalities and other variables may be associated with urolith status. Animals Twenty‐four male Miniature Schnauzer dogs, consisting of 9 with (urolith formers) and 15 without (controls) CaOx uroliths. Methods Urine was collected before and 1, 2, 4, and 8 hours after feeding a standardized diet. Receiver operator characteristic curve analysis was performed to identify the UCa/Cr cutoff that most accurately differentiates dogs based on urolith status. Results Urolith formers had significantly higher mean UCa/Cr over the course of 8 hours. The postprandial change in UCa/Cr was not significant at any time point between or within groups. The cutoff UCa/Cr value of 0.06 had a specificity of 93% (95% confidence interval [CI], 80%‐100%) and a sensitivity of 56% (95% CI, 21%‐86%) for identifying CaOx urolithiasis. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Urolith‐forming male Miniature Schnauzers have excessive calciuresis, and the postprandial sampling time up to 8 hours is not critical. This simple urine measurement has potential as a marker of CaOx disease.https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15690calciuresiscystolithiasisnephrolithiasisveterinary
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susan V. Carr
David C. Grant
Stefanie M. DeMonaco
Megan Shepherd
spellingShingle Susan V. Carr
David C. Grant
Stefanie M. DeMonaco
Megan Shepherd
Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasis
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
calciuresis
cystolithiasis
nephrolithiasis
veterinary
author_facet Susan V. Carr
David C. Grant
Stefanie M. DeMonaco
Megan Shepherd
author_sort Susan V. Carr
title Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasis
title_short Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasis
title_full Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasis
title_fullStr Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasis
title_full_unstemmed Measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male Miniature Schnauzers with and without urolithiasis
title_sort measurement of preprandial and postprandial urine calcium to creatinine ratios in male miniature schnauzers with and without urolithiasis
publisher Wiley
series Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
issn 0891-6640
1939-1676
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Abstract Background We aimed to identify a simple test for excessive calciuresis and predict calcium oxalate (CaOx) disease in Miniature Schnauzers. We investigated the impact of postprandial time on the urine calcium to creatinine ratio (UCa/Cr) in male dogs of this breed, with the goal of improving the utility of the UCa/Cr. Hypotheses (1) Significant differences will exist in preprandial and postprandial UCa/Cr between CaOx urolith‐forming and control Schnauzers. (2) The UCa/Cr will increase significantly from the first morning baseline at ≥1 postprandial time point(s) in both control and CaOx urolith‐forming dogs. (3) Biochemical abnormalities and other variables may be associated with urolith status. Animals Twenty‐four male Miniature Schnauzer dogs, consisting of 9 with (urolith formers) and 15 without (controls) CaOx uroliths. Methods Urine was collected before and 1, 2, 4, and 8 hours after feeding a standardized diet. Receiver operator characteristic curve analysis was performed to identify the UCa/Cr cutoff that most accurately differentiates dogs based on urolith status. Results Urolith formers had significantly higher mean UCa/Cr over the course of 8 hours. The postprandial change in UCa/Cr was not significant at any time point between or within groups. The cutoff UCa/Cr value of 0.06 had a specificity of 93% (95% confidence interval [CI], 80%‐100%) and a sensitivity of 56% (95% CI, 21%‐86%) for identifying CaOx urolithiasis. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Urolith‐forming male Miniature Schnauzers have excessive calciuresis, and the postprandial sampling time up to 8 hours is not critical. This simple urine measurement has potential as a marker of CaOx disease.
topic calciuresis
cystolithiasis
nephrolithiasis
veterinary
url https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15690
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