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Prospective evaluation of a telmisartan suppression test as a diagnostic tool for primary hyperaldosteronism in cats

Authors :
Maxime Kurtz
Virginie Fabrès
Renaud Dumont
Valérie Chetboul
Sabine Chahory
Vittorio Saponaro
Emilie Trehiou
Camille Poissonnier
Peggy Passavin
Coline Jondeau
Matthieu Bott
Thierry Buronfosse
Ghita Benchekroun
Source :
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, Vol 37, Iss 4, Pp 1348-1357 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Wiley, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Background In a previous study, telmisartan suppressed aldosterone secretion in healthy cats but not in cats with primary hyperaldosteronism (PHA). Hypotheses Telmisartan suppresses aldosterone secretion in middle‐aged healthy cat and cats with diseases that may result in secondary hyperaldosteronism, but not in those with PHA. Animals Thirty‐eight cats: 5 with PHA; 16 with chronic kidney disease (CKD), subclassified as hypertensive (CKD‐H) or non‐hypertensive (CKD‐NH); 9 with hyperthyroidism (HTH); 2 with idiopathic systemic arterial hypertension (ISH); and 6 healthy middle‐aged cats. Methods Prospective, cross‐sectional study. Serum aldosterone concentration, potassium concentration, and systolic blood pressure were measured before and 1 and 1.5 hours after PO administration of 2 mg/kg of telmisartan. The aldosterone variation rate (AVR) was calculated for each cat. Results No significant difference in the minimum AVR was observed among groups (median [quartile 1 (Q1); quartile 3 (Q3)]: 25 [0; 30]; 5 [−27; −75]; 10 [−6; −95]; 53 [19; 86]; 29 [5; 78]) for PHA, CKD, HTH, ISH, and healthy cats, respectively (P = .05). Basal serum aldosterone concentration (pmol/L) was significantly higher in PHA cats (median [Q1; Q3]: 2914 [2789; 4600]) than in CKD‐H cats (median [Q1; Q3]: 239 [189; 577], corrected P value = .003) and CKD‐NH cats (median [Q1; Q3]: 353 [136; 1371], corrected P value = .004). Conclusions and Clinical Importance The oral telmisartan suppression test using a single dose of 2 mg/kg telmisartan did not discriminate cats with PHA from healthy middle‐aged cats or cats with diseases that may result in secondary hyperaldosteronism.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19391676 and 08916640
Volume :
37
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.17fffea7783647089cd288f262e839d6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16741