Evaluation of Serum NT-proBNP Levels in Dogs with Respiratory Distress Associated with Heart disease and Respiratory Disease

Authors

  • Amornrate Sastravaha
  • Santi Kaewmokul
  • Pareeya Udomkusonsri
  • Naris Thengchaisri

Keywords:

Dog, heart failure, heartworm, NT-proBNP, respiratory disease

Abstract

The association between severity of heart disease and serum N-terminal prohormone B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) was determined in dogs presented with respiratory distress. Four groups of dogs were divided into healthy control (n=11), heart failure (n=58), heart disease without heart failure (n=17) and respiratory disease (n=20). Serum NT-proBNP concentrations were measured with an ELISA designed for using in dogs. Dirofilaria
antigen tests were detected in dogs with heart disease or heart failure. Serum NT-proBNP concentrations of dogs with heart failure (2,977±184 pmol/l) were significantly higher than dogs with heart disease (611±46 pmol/l), respiratory disease (583±52 pmol/l) or physically healthy (426±32 pmol/l). In dogs with heart failure, the serum NT-proBNP concentrations from the female dogs (3,291±266 pmol/l) were slightly higher than the male dogs (2,770±247 pmol/l), but did not reach the statistical significant. Dirofilaria infections were also found in dogs with heart disease (n=9) and dogs with heart failure (n=7). Interestingly, NT-proBNP concentration from Dirofilaria infected dogs with heart
disease (533±53 pmol/l) was significantly lower than Dirofilaria infected dogs with heart failure (2,576±504 pmol/l). Different cut-off values (at 300, 600 and 900 pmol/l) were used to discriminate the dogs with heart failure from other groups, high cut off values slightly reduced percent sensitivity (98.3%, 93.1% and 93.1%, respectively) while
significantly improved percent specificity (7.7%, 59.0% and 92.3%, respectively). In conclusion, the serum NT-proBNP levels were comparable in dogs with and without heart diseases except including the heart failure dogs. Furthermore, gender and Dirofilaria infection did not influence in the serum NT-proBNP concentration. The use of higher cut-off
values for serum NT-proBNP significantly improves specificity of the test for the diagnosis of congestive heart failure in dogs with respiratory distress.

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Published

2010-09-01

How to Cite

Sastravaha, A., Kaewmokul, S., Udomkusonsri, P., & Thengchaisri, N. (2010). Evaluation of Serum NT-proBNP Levels in Dogs with Respiratory Distress Associated with Heart disease and Respiratory Disease. The Thai Journal of Veterinary Medicine, 40(3), 289–295. Retrieved from https://he01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/tjvm/article/view/35721

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Section

Original Articles