Title: Grand Rounds
1Grand Rounds
- Dianne E. Kittrell, D.V.M.
- The Animal Medical Center
- New York, NY
- March 19, 2003
2Gigio Vosilla Signalment
11 Yr, MC, Miniature Poodle No known prior
medical conditions Vaccinated annually No monthly
heartworm of tick preventative Extensive travel
history
3Presenting Complaints
- Epistaxis
- Intermittent and bilateral of one month duration
- Lethargy and inappetence
- Two week history of nonspecific clinical
abnormalities. - Stiff gait
- Recent progression of chronic pelvic limb
stiffness.
4Pertinent History
- Previously healthy animal
- Medical attention provided by RDVM
- Palliative - aimed at controlling blood loss
- CBC, SMA
- Urinalysis, Urine culture
5Initial Abnormalities
- Physical Examination
- 10.0 LBS
- Mild weight loss per owners
- Depressed/quiet
- Febrile
- 103
- Pale mucous membranes
- Mild generalized lymphadenomegaly
- Referral blood work
- Hypoalbuminemia
- 1.9 g/dl
- Hyperglobulinemia
- 9.9 g/dl
- Non-regenerative anemia
- 18.4
- Proteinuria
- 3 - 1.043 spec grav.
6Initial Problem List
- Epistaxis
- Chronic, intermittent
- Hypoalbuminemia
- Hyperglobulinemia
- Anemia
- Proteinuria
- Lethargy and Inappetance
- Pelvic limb stiffness
- Chronic, progressive
7Differential Diagnoses
- Epistaxis
- Bleeding disorders
- Factor deficiency (congenital or acquired),
thrombocytopenia/thrombocytopathy (infectious or
immune mediated) - Infections
- Viral, bacterial (rhinosinusitis), fungal
(aspergillus spp., cryptococcus), Rickettsial
(ehrlichia, RMSF), parasitic
8Differential Diagnoses
- Epistaxis
- Neoplasia/Polyps
- (carcinomas, sarcomas)
- Hypertension
- (primary or secondary)
9Differential Diagnoses
- Hypoalbuminemia
- Physiologic
- dilution
- Decreased production
- Hepatic failure
- Increased loss
- Renal
- Gastrointestinal
- Significant hemorrhage
- catabolism
10Differential Diagnoses
- Hyperglobulinemia
- Alpha globulins
- alpha-1,alpha-2
- Beta globulins
- beta-1, beta-2
- Gamma globulins
- IgM, IgA, IgG
- Monoclonal
- Polyclonal
11Differential Diagnoses
- Monoclonal
- Infections
- (Ehrlichiosis, Leishmaniasis, idiopathic)
- Neoplasia
- (Multiple myeloma, macroglobulinemia, lymphoma,
rare extramedullary plasmacytoma) - Miscellaneous
- (Cunaneous amyloidosis, plasmacytic
gastroenteritis)
12Differential Diagnoses
- Polyclonal
- Infections
- Bacterial (Brucellosis, Pyoderma, Bacterial
endocarditis) - Viral
- Fungal (blastomycosis, histoplasmosis,
coccidioidomycosis) - Rickettsial (Erlichiosis)
- Parasitic (Dirofilariasis, Demodicosis, Scabies)
13Differential Diagnoses
- Polyclonal
- Immune-Mediated
- (infectious complex deposition, SLE, GN, IMHA,
ITP, Polyarthritis, pemphigus complex, Rheumatoid
arthritis) - Neoplasia
14Differential Diagnoses
- Proteinuria
- Pre renal
- Exercise, fever or seizures, hyperproteinemia
- Renal
- Glomerular disease
- Tubular dysfunction
- Post renal
- Lower urinary tract disease
15Differential Diagnosis
- Nonregenerative Anemia
- Secondary anemia
- Inflammation
- Chronic renal failure
- Chronic hepatic disease
- Endocrine diseases
- Infections
- Ehrlichia
- Bone Marrow dyscrasias
- Drug induced hematologic dyscrasias
- Iron-Deficiency
16Differential Diagnosis
- Chronic Lameness
- Musculoskeletal disease
- Arthritic changes, luxating patellas, cruciate or
lateral collateral ligamentous rupture - Joint disease
- Infectious, immune mediated, inflammatory
- Neurologic deficit
17Initial Diagnostic Plan
- Submit and Pend
- CBC, Serum Chemistry Panel
- Special Coagulation Panel
- Serum EPH
- Tick serology including E Canis, Rocky Mountain
Spotted Fever and Lyme - Urine proteincreatinine ratio free catch
- Bence-Jones proteins
- Cytology of Lymph node aspirates
- Blood pressure Doppler normal _at_ 140mmHg
- Orthopedic exam
18Initial Therapeutic plan
- Doxycycline
- 10mg/kg/day
- Tetracycline antibiotic
- Bacteriostatic
- Broad spectrum
19Initial Results Day Two
20Initial Results - Day Three
- Urine protein/creatinine ratio
- 8.7 (increased)
- Bence-Jones proteins
- positive
- Tick panel E.Canis, RMSF Lyme
- no antibody detected _at_ 125 (negative)
- Lymph nodes cytology
- consistent with hyperplastic lymph nodes.
- Drawer sign present
- suspect chronic cruciate tear
- EPH pending
21Treatment
- Therapeutic adjustments
- Enalapril (0.5mg/kg/day)
- Low dose aspirin (0.5mg/kg/day)
- Derm Caps
- Canned K/D diet
22Probable Differentials
- Myeloma
- Lethargy anorexia
- Hyperglobulinemia
- monoclonal
- Bence-Jones proteinuria
- Non-regenerative anemia
- Infectious disease
- Lethargy anorexia
- Hyperglobulinemia
- Monoclonal
- polyclonal
- Bence-Jones Proteinuria possible but not
expected - Non-regenerative anemia
23Additional Diagnostics imaging New findings
- Thoracic and abdominal radiographs normal study
- Abdominal ultrasound normal study
- BMBT 3 minutes 45 seconds
- Bone marrow evaluation normal cellularity and
normal activity of all cell series with no
evidence of neoplasia.
24Bone lesions in Myeloma
25Myeloma Marrow
26Change of Course Additional Serology
- Serum Electrophoresis Polyclonal
- Continue search for infectious diseases
- Leishmania donovani negative
- Heartworm negative
- Ehrlichia (platys, risticcii, equi)
- Positive Ehrlichia Risttici 15120
27Classification of Rickettsiaceae
28Ehrlichia Grouped by Tropism
Monocytic
Granulocytic
Platelet
E. ewingii E. equi E. phagocytophila
E. canis E. risticii E. chaffeensis E.
sennetsu E. muris
E. platys
29Canine Monocytic Ehrlichiosis
- Clinical Pathology Typical Picture
- Anemia (mild to severe, non-regenerative)
- Thrombocytopenia (mild to moderate)
- Lymphocytosis
- Hyperglobulinemia (poly or monoclonal gammopathy)
- GN signs (? albumin, ?urine P/C, etc)
- Bm hypocellularity, plasmacytosis
30Canine Monocytic Ehrlichiosis
- Diagnosis
- IFA Antibody Titer
- Morulae (buffy coat)
- PCR
- Culture
- Treatment
- Tetracycline's, Chloramphenicol, Imidocarb,
Quinolones - Corticosteroids
31IFA (Indirect immunofluorescence assay)
- Antibodies in the serum bind to the organisms on
a slide and are detected by a fluorescein-labeled
conjugate - Antibodies reactive with one Ehrlichia species
can be cross reactive with other species of
Ehrlichia
32Canine Monocytic Ehrlichiosis
- Most common form of K9 Ehrlichiosis
- Organisms infects mononuclear cells
- Transmission - Rhipicephalus sanguineus (brown
dog tick) - Acute phase, subclinical carrier phase, and
chronic disease phase - Can occur in any season due in part to chronicity
33Acute E. canis Infections
- Non-specific findings 8-20 days post bite
- Lethargy
- Fever
- Anorexia
- Weight loss
- Lymphadenopathy
- Laboratory changes (Plt, mild PMN, PCV)
34Chronic E. canis Infections
- Clinical signs
- Bleeding disorders (60)
- Anorexia (34)
- Lethargy (31)
- Weight loss (24)
- Polyarthritis
- Neurologic abnormalities (16)
- Ocular lesions (16)
- Lymphadenopathy
- splenomegaly hepatomegaly (20)
35Protein Losing Nephropathy
- Glomerulonephritis
- Primary
- Secondary
- Amyloidosis
- Glomerulopathy
- Familial
36Diseases Associated with Glomerulonephritis
- Infectious
- Dirofilaria immitis
- Ehrlichiosis
- RMSF
- Borreliosis
- Leptospirosis
- K9 Adenovirus type 2
- Leishmaniasis
- Brucellosis
- Chronic bacterial infections
- Bacterial endocarditis
- Pyometra
37Diseases Associated with Glomerulonephritis
- Inflammatory Conditions
- Pancreatitis
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
- Immune-mediated hemolytic anemia
- Prostatitis
- Polyarthritis
- Endocrine
- Hyperadrenocorticism
- Diabetes Mellitus
- Neoplasia
38The Glomerulus
- Small molecules move freely
- Larger molecules are restricted
- Negatively charged particles are restricted
- Albumin is excluded
39Histologic Classification Familial Glomerular
Diseases
- Membranoproliferative
- Soft-coated wheaten terriers (often assoc w/PLE)
- Bernease mountain dogs (often assoc w/
borreliosis) - CIII deficiency in Brittany spaniels
- Basement membrane disorders
- Autosomal recessive in English cocker spaniels
- X linked dominant in Samoyeds
- Suspected in Doberman Pinchers Bull terriers
40Pathophysiology
- Preformed circulating antigen-antibody complexes
are deposited within the glomeruli - Antigen is trapped in the glomerular capillary
wall, and circulating antibodies form complexes
with them
41Sodium Retention
- Urinary loss of albumin causes hypoalbuminemia
- Decreased oncotic pressure causes loss of water
and electrolytes from vascular space - Decreased circulating volume stimulated the RAS
- Aldosterone stimulates renal retention of sodium
and water - Decreased oncotic pressure prevents retention of
water in vascular space
42Sodium Retention
- Aldosterone concentrations can be normal or low
in nephrotic syndrome and ace inhibitors may not
prevent sodium retention - Patients with nephrotic syndrome have blunted ANP
response - Primary intrarenal sodium retention in distal
nephron (independent of aldosterone) leads to ECF
expansion and edema
43Pathologic Processes Leading to Glomerular Injury
and Proteinuria
44Pathways Leading to Progressive Renal Failure
45Glomerular DiseaseBiochemisry Findings
- Lab abnormalities of CRF
- Azotemia
- Hyperphosphatemia
- Metabolic acidosis
- Hypoalbuminemia
- Up to 70 of dogs with amyloidosis
- Up to 60 of dogs with GN
- Hypercholesterolemia
- Up to 90 of dogs with amyloidosis
- Up to 60 of dogs with GN
- decrease Upr/Ucr in azotemic dogs with declining
GFR is NOT a sign of improvement
46Complications Thromboembolism in Nephrotc
Syndrome
- Hypercoagulable state
- Mild thrombocytosis, Increased platelet adhesion
and aggregation - Loss of ATIII in urine (normally acts with
heparin to inhibit factors II, IX, X, XII) - Urinary loss of lower MW factors (IX XI, XII)
- Increased Plasma concentration of higher MW
factors (II, V, VII, VIII, X) (increased
hepatic synthesis) - Thromboembolism occurs in 15-25 of dogs with
nephrotic syndrome
47Complications Hypertension in Nephrotic Syndrome
- Primary intrarenal mechanism for sodium retention
- Activation of RAS
- Impaired release of renal vasodilator substance
- Hypertension occurs in 50-85 of dogs with
glomerular disease - Controlling hypertension may slow progression of
renal disease
48Complications Hyperlipidemia in Nephrotic
syndrome
- Increased hepatic synthesis and decreased
peripheral catabolism of lipotroteins caused by
hypoalbuminemia and urinary loss of lipid
regulatory factors - Plasma cholesterol and triglyceride
concentrations directly proportional to the
degree of renal azotemia
49(No Transcript)
50Treatment of Glomerular DiseaseReduction of
Thromboxanes
- Effect of Dietary n-3 fatty acid supplementation
- Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (fish oil)
may suppress glomerular inflammation by
decreasing thromboxane synthesis - Thromboxane synthetase inhibitors can reduce
proteinuria in dogs with experimental GN
51Treatment of Glomerular DiseaseACE Inhibitors
- Decrease glomerular capillary hydrostatic
pressure (and proteinuria) by decreasing
post-glomerular arteriolar restance - In a study of dogs with GN 0.5 mg/kg po q 12-24
hrs reduces proteinuria, reduced blood pressure
and may have slowed progression of renal disease. - Grauer, Greco, Getzy. JVIM 200014526-533
52Treatment of Glomerular DiseasePrevention of
Thromboembolism
- Low dose aspirin (0.5 mg/kg/day has been used in
dogs with GN to inhibit platelet aggregation - Dogs with ATIII lt 70 normal or fibrinogen gt 300
mg/dl may be at increased risk - Heparin is of little usefulness when ATIII is low
(requires ATIII as a cofactor)
53Specific Treatment forGlomerulonephritis
- Cyclosporine (15 mg/kg po q 24 hr did not have
beneficial effect in dogs with GN one study - Armstrong et al. JVIM 19959259-266
- Azathioprine (2.2 mg/kg po q 24 hrs) may be
helpful in dogs w/ GN - Corticosteroids for treatment of the underlying
disease
54Gigio Vosilla - 2 months from onset
- Weight gain 11.4 lbs (from 10.0 lbs)
- Urine proteincreatinine ratio4.2 (from 8.7)
- Albumin 2 g/dl (from 1.5 g/dl)
- Globulins 7.7 g/dl (from 10.1)
- Initiated prednisone therapy
- 10 mg/day x 14 days 7.5 mg/day x 14 days
- 5 mg/day continually
55Gigio Vosilla - 4 months from onset
- Weight Gain 12.3 lbs (from 10 lbs)
- Urine proteincreatinine ratio3.4 (from 8.7)
- Albumin 2.0g/dl (from 1.5 g/dl)
- Globulin 6.2 g/dl (from 10.1 g/dl)
- Packed cell volume 20g/dl
- Ehrlichia Risticii IFA Negative
56Gigio Vosilla - 6 months from onset
- Temperature 104 degrees
- Urine culture negative
- Recurrence of generalized lymphadenomegaly
- Depressed
- Blood pressure 130 mmHg
57Gigio Vosilla - 7 months from onset
- Presented acutely vomiting and depressed
- Non-ambulatory/joint effusion palpable
- Progressive anemia 13
- Albumin 2.5 g/dl
- Globulin 5.4 g/dl
- Azotemic Bun/Creat 124/4.8
- Plan Bone Marrow, Joint tap, diuresis, and
blood transfusion
58Forgotten Diagnostics
- Measurement of serum hyperviscosity
- Erythrocyte sedimentation rate
- Follow up inappropriate
- Serial monitoring of EPH
- The hyperglobulinemia associated with CME does
not correlate with the antibody titers to
ehrlichia - Anti-Ehrlichia antibody titers may persist for
months to years after treatment - A progressive decrease in the gammaglobulin
concentrations is associated with elimination of
the parastite
59References
- Codner EC, Maslin WR. Investigation of Renal
Protein Loss in Dogs with Acute Experimentally
Induced Ehrlichia Canis Infection. AJVR
199253294-299 - Grauer GF. CVT Update Canine Glomerulonephritis.
pp. 851-853 - Harrus S, Bark H, Waner T. Canine Monocytic
Ehrlichiosis An Update. Compendium 1997194 - Green CE, Neer TM. Infectious Diseases of the
Dog and Cat. Ch. 28 pp. 139-154 - Neer TM, Eddlestone SM, Gaunt SD, Corstvet RE.
Efficacy of Enrofloxacin for the Treatment of
Experimentally Induced Ehrlichia canis Infection.
JVIM 199913501-504
60References
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of Ehrlichiosis in 62 dogs from North Carolina
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Platelet-Associated Immunoglobulin (Antiplatelet
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61References
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pathophysiology, and Clinical Signs. Compendium
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62References
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