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Evaluation of an automated system for hemoglobin measurement in animals.
1992
Callan M.B. | Giger U. | Oakley D.A. | Scotti M.V. | Shofer F.S.
In veterinary medicine, PCV determined by centrifugation of blood in a microhematocrit tube is the most common clinical test used to initially assess and monitor anemic and polycythemic animals. In contrast, blood hemoglobin (Hb) concentration, rather than PCV, is generally determined in human patients. One automated system photometrically measures blood Hb concentration after conversion of Hb to azide methemoglobin without dilution and was found to be a simple and accurate instrument for use in human medicine. We evaluated the system for its accuracy in measuring blood Hb concentration in animals by comparing it with standard techniques and for its suitability in veterinary practice. Blood samples, anticoagulated with potassium EDTA, from 78 healthy animals (33 dogs, 17 cats, 13 horses, and 15 cows) and 58 dogs and 4 cats with various blood abnormalities (10 anemia, 11 polycythemia, 21 lipemia, 16 leukocytosis, and 6 icterus) were analyzed. In all species, blood Hb concentration of healthy animals determined by the system was comparable to that measured by standard cyanmethemoglobin methods (ie, an automated counter; rI = 0.987 to 0.998 and a hemoglobin kit, rI = 0.946 to 0.993). The aforementioned system also yielded similar values to those obtained by use of standard methods in anemic, polycythemic, and icteric dogs and cats. Moreover, the system reads the absorbance at 2 wavelengths to correct for turbidity, and therefore, accurately measured Hb concentration in blood samples with severe lipemia (triglycerides concentration > 500 mg/dl) and marked leukocytosis (> 50,000 WBC/microl), whereas other standard Hb techniques are known to give falsely high results. We conclude that the automated system compares favorably to standard methods, and is a simple and accurate instrument to quickly measure Hb concentration in animals.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of the Doppler ultrasonic method of measuring systolic arterial blood pressure in cats.
1992
Grandy J.L. | Dunlop C.I. | Hodgson D.S. | Curtis C.R. | Chapman P.L.
The accuracy of the Doppler technique for indirect systolic blood pressure measurement was assessed in 16 anesthetized cats. Eight cats were anesthetized with isoflurane and 8 were anesthetized with halothane. Anesthetic depth and mode of ventilation were varied to obtain a wide range of arterial blood pressure. A Doppler transducer was placed on the palmer surface of the left fore-limb over the common digital branch of the radial artery to detect blood flow, and a blood pressure monitoring cuff with a width 37% the limb circumference was placed half way between the elbow and the carpus. To enable direct arterial pressure measurements, the left femoral artery was catheterized and the blood pressure waveforms recorded simultaneously. Systolic blood pressure measured by use of the Doppler ultrasonic technique was significantly lower than that obtained from the femoral artery catheter. Using linear regression, we determined a clinically useful calibration adjustment for Doppler indirect blood pressure measurement in cats: femoral systolic pressure = Doppler systolic pressure + 14 mm of Hg.
Show more [+] Less [-]Bioelectrical impedance and zoometry for body composition analysis in domestic cats.
1992
Stanton C.A. | Hamar D.W. | Johnson D.E. | Fettman M.J.
Zoometric measurements and bioelectrical impedance analysis were evaluated as methods of body composition determination in healthy cats. Zoometric and impedance measurements were taken on 22 anesthetized adult cats of various ages, genders, breeds, and body weights. The cats were then euthanatized. The bodies were processed through a tissue homogenizer and free-catch specimens were taken, freeze-dried, and analyzed for total body water, protein, fat, potassium, and ash content. Stepwise regression analysis was implemented to identify statistically significant relationships between the chemically determined dependent variables (total body water, protein, potassium, fat-free mass, fat mass, and percent body fat) and the zoometric measurements, with or without bioelectrical impedance analysis. Statistical analysis revealed high correlations between the dependent variables and the corresponding predicted values of those variables. Body weight alone was a poor predictor of body composition in these cats. On the basis of these findings, we suggest that zoometric and bioelectrical impedance measurements may serve as practical, noninvasive, simple, and accurate methods for estimating body composition in domestic cats.
Show more [+] Less [-]Culture and initial characterization of the secretory response of neoplastic cat mast cells
1992
Mohr, F.C. | Dunston, S.K.
Mast cells isolated from feline splenic mastocytomas were cultured to study their structural and functional properties. isolated cells from various cats were grown as monolayer cultures for a mean of 56 days (range, 30 to 76 days). Cat mast cells released allergic mediators in response to compound 48/80, anti-cat serum antibodies, and concanavalin A. On the basis of the finding that secretion from cat mast cells was stimulated by anti-cat serum antibodies and concanavalin A, these cells contain surface-bound immunoglobulins. The presence of mast cell-sensitizing antibodies has been suspected in cats, but never before directly demonstrated. Cultured cat mast cells have cytochemical and functional characteristics common to connective tissue-type mast cells and provide one of the few non-rodent models of cultured cells for the study of this type of mast cell.
Show more [+] Less [-]Patterns of expression of feline cytokeratins in healthy epithelia and mammary carcinoma cells
1992
Ivanyi, D. | Minke, J.M.H.M. | Hageman, C. | Groeneveld, E. | Doornewaard, G. van
Expression of keratins (cytokeratins, CK) in healthy feline epithelia and 2 established feline mammary carcinoma cell lines was examined immunohistochemically and by use of immunoblotting analysis. A panel of specific anti-CK monoclonal antibodies (MAb) identifying epitopes unique to individual keratins or shared by 2 (or 3) CK polypeptides was used. Besides already available antihuman CK Mab, this panel of MAb consisted of 9 newly generated anti-human CK MAb and 1 newly generated anti-feline CK MAb. Immunohistochemical analysis on normal epithelia revealed that most of the anti-human CK MAb and the anti-feline CK MAb reacted with both feline and human epithelia, with a comparable tissue distribution pattern. However, slight differences in CK tissue distribution pattern between human beings and cats were detected by one MAb. Immunoblotting analysis revealed that all antihuman CK MAb that were immunohistochemically reactive with feline tissues detected analogous CK in cats, indicating the presence of a number of common epitopes on human and feline CK. Two continuous cell lines derived from 2 distinct feline mammary adenocarcinomas, K248C and K266, were analyzed with respect to their CK phenotype. Although no difference in CK expression between the 2 cell lines was detected in vitro, a difference in CK phenotype was detected on subcutaneous transplantation of the 2 cell lines into nude mice. Although the K248C-induced adenocarcinomas maintained the same CK phenotype as observed in vitro, the CK pattern of the K266 heterotransplants, growing as adenosquamous carcinomas, changed with squamous differentiation. Our findings confirm the high degree of homology between mammalian CK, and on the basis of those findings, we suggest that CK proteins provide a set of markers valuable for the characterization of normal and neoplastic feline tissues and for studies of squamous metaplasia.
Show more [+] Less [-]Efficacy of a chewable formulation of ivermectin against a mixed infection of Ancylostoma braziliense and Ancylostoma tubaeforme in cats
1992
Nolan, T.J. | Niamatali, S. | Bhopale, V. | Longhofer, S.L. | Schad, G.A.
The efficacy of a beef-based, chewable formulation of ivermectin against a mixed infection of Ancylostoma braziliense and A tubaeforme was determined in cats. Ivermectin administered orally at approximately 24 microgram/kg of body weight was 92.8% effective against adult A braziliense and 90.7% effective against adult A tubaeforme. The number of eggs per gram of feces had decreased 98.1% by 7 days after treatment. Clinical signs of hookworm disease also decreased after treatment. Location of adult parasites within the small intestine, percentage of infecting larvae that developed to the adult stage, and egg size in cats with infections of A braziliense and A tubaeforme were similar to those reported for cats with separate infections of either species.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of serum fructosamine concentration as an index of blood glucose control in cats with diabetes mellitus
1992
Kaneko, J.J. | Kawamoto, M. | Heusner, A.A. | Feldman, E.C. | Koizumi, I.
Fructosamine, a glycated serum protein, was evaluated as an index of glycemic control in normal and diabetic cats. Fructosamine was determined manually by use of a modification of an automated method. The within-run precision was 2.4 to 3.2%, and the day-to-day precision was 2.7 to 3.1%. Fructosamine was found to be stable in serum samples stored for 1 week at 4 degrees C and for 2 weeks at -20 degrees C. The reference range for serum fructosamine concentration in 31 clinically normal colony cats was 2.19 to 3.47 mmol/L (mean, 2.83 +/- 0.32 mmol/L). In 27 samples from 16 cats with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus, the range for fructosamine concentration was 3.04 to 8.83 mmol/L (mean, 5.93 +/- 1.35 mmol/L). Fructosamine concentration was directly and highly correlated to blood glucose concentration. Fructosamine concentration also remained high in consort with increased blood glucose concentration in cats with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus over extended periods. It is concluded that measurement of serum fructosamine concentration can be a valuable adjunct to blood glucose monitoring to evaluate glycemic control in diabetic cats. The question of whether fructosamine can replace glucose for monitoring control of diabetes mellitus requires further study.
Show more [+] Less [-]Humoral immune response to feline immunodeficiency virus in cats wit experimentally induced and naturally acquired infections
1992
Egberink, H.F. | Keldermans, C.E.J.M. | Koolen, M.J.M. | Horzinek, M.C.
Sera from cats with naturally acquired and experimentally induced feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) infections were tested by immunoblot analysis, radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA), and a complex trapping/ blocking ELISA. In sequentially obtained samples from experimentally inoculated cats, antibodies against the envelope protein gpl20 and the core protein pl5 were the first to appear, as indicated by results of RIPA, using lysates of FIV-infected lymphocytes. Antibodies could be detected as early as 2 weeks after infection, followed by a response against p24, p43, and p50. By immunoblot analysis, p24 and pl5 were the first proteins detectable between postinoculation weeks 3 and 5; an anti-envelope response was never found by use of this assay, but was found by RIPA. Using the latter test, most sera of naturally infected cats were found to recognize the major core protein p24 in addition to 1 or more minor core proteins. All 40 sera tested precipitated the envelope protein; 3 reacted exclusively with it. A complex trapping/blocking ELISA was developed to quantitate the anti-p24 response. Sera from healthy FIV-infected cats were shown to have higher anti-p24 titer than did those from diseased cats.
Show more [+] Less [-]Determination of protein concentrations and their molecular weight in tears from cats with normal corneas and cats with corneal sequestrum
1992
Davidson, H.J. | Gerlach, J.A. | Bull, R.W.
Protein concentration was determined, using the Bradford technique, in tears from cats with normal corneas and from cats with corneal sequestrum. Tears from the former group contained 5.81 +/- 2.29 mg of protein/ml; those from cornmeal sequestrum-affected cats contained 6.21 +/- 2.21 mg/ml. Difference between the 2 values was not significant. Molecular weight determination was made, using 4 to 20% sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Molecular mass of proteins ranged from 263 to 14 kDa. There was no detectable difference in the band patterns for the 2 groups.
Show more [+] Less [-]Accuracy of ultrasonography in the detection of severe hepatic lipidosis in cats
1992
Yeager, A.E. | Mohammed, H.
The accuracy of ultrasonography in detection of feline hepatic lipidosis was studied retrospectively. The following ultrasonographic criteria were associated positively with severe hepatic lipidosis: the liver hyperechoic, compared with falciform fat; the liver isoechoic or hyperechoic, compared with omental fat; poor visualization of intrahepatic vessel borders; and increased attenuation of sound by the liver. In a group of 36 cats with clinically apparent hepatobiliary disease and in which liver biopsy was done, liver hyperechoic, compared with falciform fat, was the best criterion for diagnosis of severe hepatic lipidosis with 91% sensitivity, 100% specificity, and 100% positive predictive value.
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