1. Prevalence of hypercalcemia in primary hypoadrenocorticism in dogs: Multicenter, retrospective study
- Author
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Harriet Hall, Timothy Williams, Jessica Florey, Mireia Pascual Moreno, Victoria Black, Daniel Thompson, and Barbara Skelly
- Subjects
glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid‐deficient hypoadrenocorticism ,glucocorticoid only deficient hypoadrenocorticism ,ionized calcium ,total calcium ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Abstract Background Hypoadrenocorticism is an important differential for hypercalcemia. The etiology of hypercalcemia in hypoadrenocorticism in dogs is unclear. Objective To review the prevalence of hypercalcemia and use statistical models to identify clinical, demographic, and biochemical variables associated with hypercalcemia in dogs with primary hypoadrenocorticism. Animals One hundred ten dogs with primary hypoadrenocorticism; 107 with recorded total calcium (TCa), 43 recorded ionized calcium (iCa). Methods Multicenter retrospective observational study at 4 UK referral hospitals. Univariable logistic regression analyses were performed to assess the association between independent variables of signalment, hypoadrenocorticism type (glucocorticoid only deficient hypoadrenocorticism [GHoC] vs glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid deficient hypoadrenocorticism [GMHoC]), clinicopathological variables and hypercalcemia. Hypercalcemia was defined as elevated TCa, an elevated iCa, or both elevated TCa and iCa (Model 1) or as elevated iCa (Model 2). Results Overall prevalence of hypercalcemia was 34.5% (38/110). The odds of hypercalcemia (Model 1) were increased (P
- Published
- 2023
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