一个孟肯猫家族群体和一只无血缘关系的家养短毛猫的黄嘌呤尿症。

IF 1.9 2区 农林科学 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Emily C Pritchard, Bianca Haase, Meredith J Wall, Carolyn R O'Brien, Richard Gowan, Kim Mizzi, Annie Kicinski, Juan Podadera, Lara A Boland
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引用次数: 0

摘要

病例系列摘要:共发现四例猫黄嘌呤尿确诊病例和一例基于血统分析的疑似病例。临床表现各不相同,包括血尿、花粉尿、排尿困难以及尿道和输尿管梗阻。所有猫都有上尿路尿石症。诊断是通过对尿道结石或尿液进行红外质谱分析得出的。所有猫在 3-8 个月大时开始出现临床症状,在引入限制蛋白质的饮食后,这些症状在中长期内均有所减轻。四只猫是被阉割的雄性,一只是绝育的雌性。病例包括四只Munchkin纯种猫和一只无关的短毛家猫。四只受影响的 Munchkin 纯种猫都有血缘关系,其中三只是同胞兄弟姐妹,第四只是同父异母兄弟姐妹。家养短毛猫与 Munchkin 血统猫没有任何联系。在 Munchkin 家族中排除了为该猫提出的一个候选致病基因变体(XDH p.A681V):所有患病猫都面临诊断难题,常规尿液分析不足以确诊。由于无法提取尿石进行分析,而且仅凭常规尿液分析中的晶体形态无法做出诊断,猫黄嘌呤尿症病例可能会被漏诊。在无法获取或没有尿石的疑似病例中,尿液代谢筛查可为黄嘌呤尿症的确诊提供有效机制。在本病例系列中,雄猫较为常见。它们的解剖结构可能会增加黄嘌呤尿石症继发下尿路症状和尿道梗阻的风险。作为长期治疗的一部分,限制蛋白质的饮食似乎可以减少临床症状:四只亲缘关系很近的孟肯猫和一只短毛猫被发现患有疑似遗传病,导致尿液中黄嘌呤含量过高。本系列病例探讨了它们临床症状的异同,以及在获得正确诊断时遇到的困难。所有猫都患有上尿路结石,需要对结石或尿液进行代谢检测才能确诊。所有猫咪在出现临床症状时都很年轻,并且都食用高蛋白食物。四只猫是绝育后的雄猫,一只是绝育后的雌猫。在 Munchkin 家族中,可能导致家养短毛猫患病的基因变异已被排除。猫科动物尿液中黄嘌呤含量过高的病例可能会被漏诊,因为可能无法取出结石进行检测。在这一系列病例中,公猫更为常见。它们的解剖结构可能会增加出现下尿路症状的风险。作为长期治疗的一部分,限制蛋白质的饮食似乎可以减少临床症状。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Xanthinuria in a familial group of Munchkin cats and an unrelated domestic shorthair cat.

Case series summary: Four confirmed cases of xanthinuria in cats, and one suspected case based on pedigree analysis, were identified. Clinical presentations varied and included haematuria, pollakiuria, dysuria, and urethral and ureteral obstruction. All cats had upper urinary tract uroliths. Diagnosis was obtained through infrared mass spectrometry of uroliths or urine. Clinical signs commenced at 3-8 months of age and reduced in all cats in the medium to long term after the introduction of a protein-restricted diet. Four cats were castrated males and one was a spayed female. Cases consisted of four Munchkin pedigree cats and one unrelated domestic shorthair cat. All four affected Munchkin pedigree cats were related, with three cases full siblings and the fourth case a half-sibling. No connection to the Munchkin pedigree could be established for the domestic shorthair cat. A candidate causative genetic variant (XDH p.A681V) proposed for this cat was excluded in the Munchkin family.

Relevance and novel information: All affected cats presented diagnostic challenges and routine urinalysis was insufficient to obtain a diagnosis. Cases of feline xanthinuria may be underdiagnosed due to situations where uroliths cannot be retrieved for analysis and there is an inability to make a diagnosis using crystal morphology alone on routine urinalysis. Metabolic screening of urine may provide an effective mechanism to confirm xanthinuria in suspected cases where uroliths are inaccessible or absent. In this case series, male cats were more common. Their anatomy may increase the risk of lower urinary tract signs and urethral obstruction developing secondary to xanthine urolithiasis. A protein-restricted diet appears to reduce clinical signs as part of long-term management.

Plain language summary: Four closely related Munchkin cats and one domestic shorthair cat were found with a suspected genetic disease causing high levels of xanthine in their urine. The case series looks at similarities and differences in their clinical signs, as well as difficulties experienced in obtaining a correct diagnosis. All cats had upper urinary tract stones and required metabolic testing of the stones or urine to diagnose. All cats were young when their clinical signs started and were on a high-protein diet. Four cats were desexed males and one was a desexed female. A genetic variant that may have caused the disease in the domestic shorthair cat was ruled out in the Munchkin family. Cases of high xanthine levels in feline urine may be underdiagnosed as the stones may not be accessed for testing. In this case series, male cats were more common. Their anatomy may increase the risk of lower urinary tract signs. A protein-restricted diet appears to reduce clinical signs as part of long-term management.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
17.60%
发文量
254
审稿时长
8-16 weeks
期刊介绍: JFMS is an international, peer-reviewed journal aimed at both practitioners and researchers with an interest in the clinical veterinary healthcare of domestic cats. The journal is published monthly in two formats: ‘Classic’ editions containing high-quality original papers on all aspects of feline medicine and surgery, including basic research relevant to clinical practice; and dedicated ‘Clinical Practice’ editions primarily containing opinionated review articles providing state-of-the-art information for feline clinicians, along with other relevant articles such as consensus guidelines.
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