您的诊断结果是什么?马的尿液

IF 1.2 4区 农林科学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES Veterinary clinical pathology Pub Date : 2024-04-28 DOI:10.1111/vcp.13346
Caitlyn F. Connor, Alisia A. W. Weyna, Nicole L. Gottdenker, Erin L. Beasley, Samantha N. Schlemmer
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Serum biochemistry demonstrated persistent azotemia (creatinine 13.5 mg/dL, RI: 0.8–1.5), increased CK (8471 U/L, RI: 186–760), high anion gap (27, RI: 10–19), hyponatremia (128 mmol/L, RI: 132–140), hypochloremia (80 mmol/L, RI: 95–103), hyperkalemia (5.2 mmol/L, RI: 2.6–4.7), hyperalbuminemia (3.4 g/dL, RI: 2.5–3.3), hyperglycemia (125 mg/dL, RI: 70–113) and hypercalcemia (14.4 mg/dL, RI: 11–13.4); free/ionized calcium was 1.53 mmol/L (RI: 1.09–1.67).</p><p>Cystoscopy revealed red filamentous material pooling in the urine (Figure 1A,B). The urine was isosthenuric (USG 1.010) and alkaline (pH 8.0) with 1+ protein and large blood. Unstained sediment contained 10–50 RBC/hpf, 10–20 WBC/hpf, many transitional epithelial cells, 0–5/lpf linear structures (Figure 1C), rare calcium carbonate crystals, and moderate mucus threads.</p><p>The minimum database findings were suggestive of inflammation/stress, dehydration, muscle injury, and renal injury/insufficiency. The presence of macroscopic urinary casts was striking and unique. In general, urinary casts are rare in herbivores due to alkalinuria.<span><sup>1</sup></span> Cellular and granular casts are abnormal and indicate acute renal tubular injury. Cellular casts are defined by their cell composition: epithelial casts indicate renal tubular degeneration or necrosis secondary to severe dehydration, ischemia/infarction, nephrotoxicity, or pigment nephropathy; leukocyte casts imply tubulointerstitial inflammation (eg, pyelonephritis); and erythrocyte casts indicate intrarenal hemorrhage.<span><sup>1-3</sup></span> Granular casts form from the degeneration of cellular casts. In this case, the granular-appearing casts were presumed to represent breakdown products/proteins from erythrocytes (hemoglobin) and muscle (myoglobin). Hemoglobin casts occur with intravascular hemolysis and renal hemorrhage, whereas myoglobin casts indicate severe muscle injury or necrosis.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> These proteins can have a similar appearance on routine stains and can be delineated with Okajima stain (hemoglobin stains orange to orange-red) and myoglobin IHC (specific to myoglobin).</p><p>Endogenous injury from myoglobin or hemoglobin (pigment nephropathy) can result in renal tubular injury due to altered blood flow, cast formation, tubular obstruction, and oxidative injury.<span><sup>1-3</sup></span> Given the history of a trail ride preceding the hyporexia and pigmenturia, moderately increased muscle enzyme activities, and positive immunoreactivity to myoglobin IHC, the horse likely developed pigment nephropathy from myoglobinuria, with secondary intraluminal erythrocytes and hemoglobin from renal hemorrhage and tubular necrosis. CK activity &gt;1000 IU/L or 3–5 times the upper reference limit is often indicative of acute muscle necrosis.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> Additionally, peak CK activity will occur 4–6 h after muscle injury.<span><sup>5</sup></span> Therefore, the historical increase in muscle enzyme activity reported by the referring veterinarian 2 days after the onset of clinical signs suggests that the peak CK activity was likely much greater, supporting acute muscle ischemia/necrosis and subsequent myoglobinuria and myoglobin cast formation. Furthermore, this horse did not develop anemia throughout the entire clinical course, so causes of primary hemoglobinuric nephropathy (eg, immune-mediated hemolytic anemia, red maple leaf, or <i>Allium</i> species ingestion)<span><sup>1-3</sup></span> were considered unlikely. Although only two doses of flunixin were given 24 h apart, the nephrotoxic potential would be greater if the horse had concurrent dehydration/hypovolemia and/or renal injury/insufficiency,<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span> which may have contributed to the renal injury in this case.</p><p>Myoglobinuria may stem from exertional myopathies (eg, sporadic or recurrent exertional rhabdomyolysis, myofibrillar myopathy, polysaccharide storage myopathy), trauma, immune-mediated myopathies, malignant hyperthermia, clostridial myonecrosis, selenium deficiency, toxin (ionophore) ingestions, atypical myopathy/myoglobinuria, or even heat exhaustion.<span><sup>3-5</sup></span> In this case, it is unknown if there was any prior history of tying-up episodes that may support an underlying primary myopathy. Arabians are included in the performance horses (along with Thoroughbreds and standardbreds) that can develop rhabdomyolysis without underlying myopathy.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> Given the lack of gross muscle abnormalities in this case, these tissues were not collected at the time of necropsy, precluding a more definitive cause of myopathy.</p><p>In all, this case highlights the unique gross and microscopic morphology of pigment-containing casts in a horse with acute kidney injury presumed secondary to myopathy. These casts should not be overlooked as contaminants and should be included in the microscopic review, as they indicate renal pathology, and special stains can be used to differentiate hemoglobin and myoglobin pigments.</p><p>The authors have indicated that they have no affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in, or in financial competition with, the subject matter or materials discussed in this article.</p>","PeriodicalId":23593,"journal":{"name":"Veterinary clinical pathology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/vcp.13346","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"What is your diagnosis? Urine from a horse\",\"authors\":\"Caitlyn F. Connor,&nbsp;Alisia A. W. Weyna,&nbsp;Nicole L. Gottdenker,&nbsp;Erin L. Beasley,&nbsp;Samantha N. Schlemmer\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/vcp.13346\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>A 9-year-old Arabian gelding was referred for a 4-day history of hyporexia and pigmenturia after a 2-hour trail ride with severe azotemia (creatinine 9.6 mg/dL, RI: 1.0–2.0; BUN 65 mg/dL, RI: 8–26) and increased muscle enzyme activities (AST 10 167 IU/L, RI: 148–420; Creatine kinase [CK] 22 266 IU/L, RI: 45–360) noted on day 2. Prior treatment included flunixin meglumine.</p><p>The horse appeared painful with diffuse muscle fasciculations, with no other exam abnormalities. A CBC revealed a mild leukocytosis (mild mature neutrophilia); the erythron and thrombon were unremarkable. Serum biochemistry demonstrated persistent azotemia (creatinine 13.5 mg/dL, RI: 0.8–1.5), increased CK (8471 U/L, RI: 186–760), high anion gap (27, RI: 10–19), hyponatremia (128 mmol/L, RI: 132–140), hypochloremia (80 mmol/L, RI: 95–103), hyperkalemia (5.2 mmol/L, RI: 2.6–4.7), hyperalbuminemia (3.4 g/dL, RI: 2.5–3.3), hyperglycemia (125 mg/dL, RI: 70–113) and hypercalcemia (14.4 mg/dL, RI: 11–13.4); free/ionized calcium was 1.53 mmol/L (RI: 1.09–1.67).</p><p>Cystoscopy revealed red filamentous material pooling in the urine (Figure 1A,B). The urine was isosthenuric (USG 1.010) and alkaline (pH 8.0) with 1+ protein and large blood. Unstained sediment contained 10–50 RBC/hpf, 10–20 WBC/hpf, many transitional epithelial cells, 0–5/lpf linear structures (Figure 1C), rare calcium carbonate crystals, and moderate mucus threads.</p><p>The minimum database findings were suggestive of inflammation/stress, dehydration, muscle injury, and renal injury/insufficiency. 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CK activity &gt;1000 IU/L or 3–5 times the upper reference limit is often indicative of acute muscle necrosis.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> Additionally, peak CK activity will occur 4–6 h after muscle injury.<span><sup>5</sup></span> Therefore, the historical increase in muscle enzyme activity reported by the referring veterinarian 2 days after the onset of clinical signs suggests that the peak CK activity was likely much greater, supporting acute muscle ischemia/necrosis and subsequent myoglobinuria and myoglobin cast formation. Furthermore, this horse did not develop anemia throughout the entire clinical course, so causes of primary hemoglobinuric nephropathy (eg, immune-mediated hemolytic anemia, red maple leaf, or <i>Allium</i> species ingestion)<span><sup>1-3</sup></span> were considered unlikely. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

一匹 9 岁的阿拉伯骟马在骑行 2 小时后出现厌食和色素尿,并伴有严重氮质血症(肌酐 9.6 毫克/分升,里氏指数:1.0-2.0;尿素氮 65 毫克/分升,里氏指数:8-26),第 2 天肌肉酶活性升高(谷草转氨酶 10 167 IU/L,里氏指数:148-420;肌酸激酶 [CK] 22 266 IU/L,里氏指数:45-360)。这匹马看起来很痛苦,肌肉弥漫性抽搐,没有其他检查异常。全血细胞计数显示白细胞轻度增多(轻度成熟中性粒细胞增多);红细胞和血红蛋白无异常。血清生化检查显示持续性氮质血症(肌酐 13.5 mg/dL,RI:0.8-1.5)、肌酸激酶增高(8471 U/L,RI:186-760)、阴离子间隙增高(27,RI:10-19)、低钠血症(128 mmol/L,RI:132-140)、低氯血症(80 mmol/L,RI:95-103)、高钾血症(5.2 mmol/L,RI:2.膀胱镜检查发现尿液中有红色丝状物聚集(图 1A、B)。尿液呈等渗尿(USG 1.010)和碱性(pH 8.0),含有 1+ 蛋白质和大量血液。未染色沉淀物中含有 10-50 个红细胞/hpf、10-20 个白细胞/hpf、许多过渡上皮细胞、0-5/lpf 的线状结构(图 1C)、罕见的碳酸钙结晶和中等量的粘液线。最小数据库结果提示炎症/应激、脱水、肌肉损伤和肾损伤/功能不全。尿液中出现的大颗粒结晶令人震惊,也很特别。一般来说,由于碱尿症,草食动物的尿液中很少出现石膏。1 细胞和颗粒状石膏是异常的,表明急性肾小管损伤。细胞铸型是根据其细胞组成来定义的:上皮铸型表明肾小管变性或坏死,继发于严重脱水、缺血/梗死、肾毒性或色素性肾病;白细胞铸型意味着肾小管间质炎症(如肾盂肾炎);红细胞铸型表明肾内出血1-3。在本病例中,颗粒状铸型被推测为红细胞(血红蛋白)和肌肉(肌红蛋白)的分解产物/蛋白质。血管内溶血和肾出血时会出现血红蛋白铸型,而肌红蛋白铸型则表示肌肉严重损伤或坏死、3 在常规染色中,这些蛋白质会有相似的外观,并可通过冈岛染色法(血红蛋白染成橙色至橙红色)和肌红蛋白 IHC(对肌红蛋白有特异性)进行分辨。肌红蛋白或血红蛋白(色素肾病)造成的内源性损伤可导致肾小管损伤,其原因包括血流改变、石膏形成、肾小管阻塞和氧化损伤。鉴于该马在出现厌食和色素尿之前曾有过骑马的经历,肌肉酶活性中度升高,肌红蛋白 IHC 免疫反应阳性,因此该马很可能因肌红蛋白尿而患上了色素肾病,肾出血和肾小管坏死继发了管腔内红细胞和血红蛋白。5 因此,转诊兽医报告的临床症状出现两天后肌肉酶活性的历史性增长表明,CK 活性的峰值可能要大得多,这支持了急性肌肉缺血/坏死以及随后的肌红蛋白尿和肌红蛋白铸型的形成。此外,这匹马在整个临床过程中都没有出现贫血症状,因此原发性血红蛋白尿肾病的病因(如免疫介导的溶血性贫血、红枫叶或葱属植物摄入)1-3 被认为不太可能。虽然两次氟尼辛的给药时间相隔 24 小时,但如果马同时出现脱水/高血容量和/或肾损伤/功能不全,则肾毒性的可能性会更大,1, 2 这可能是本病例中肾损伤的原因之一。肌红蛋白尿可能源于劳累性肌病(如偶发性或复发性劳累性横纹肌溶解症、肌纤维肌病、多糖贮积性肌病)、创伤、免疫介导的肌病、恶性高热、梭菌性肌坏死、缺硒、摄入毒素(离子源)、非典型肌病/肌红蛋白尿,甚至热衰竭。在本病例中,尚不清楚之前是否有过可能支持潜在原发性肌病的打斗病史。阿拉伯马(与纯血马和标准种马一样)也属于可发生横纹肌溶解而无潜在肌病的赛马。
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What is your diagnosis? Urine from a horse

A 9-year-old Arabian gelding was referred for a 4-day history of hyporexia and pigmenturia after a 2-hour trail ride with severe azotemia (creatinine 9.6 mg/dL, RI: 1.0–2.0; BUN 65 mg/dL, RI: 8–26) and increased muscle enzyme activities (AST 10 167 IU/L, RI: 148–420; Creatine kinase [CK] 22 266 IU/L, RI: 45–360) noted on day 2. Prior treatment included flunixin meglumine.

The horse appeared painful with diffuse muscle fasciculations, with no other exam abnormalities. A CBC revealed a mild leukocytosis (mild mature neutrophilia); the erythron and thrombon were unremarkable. Serum biochemistry demonstrated persistent azotemia (creatinine 13.5 mg/dL, RI: 0.8–1.5), increased CK (8471 U/L, RI: 186–760), high anion gap (27, RI: 10–19), hyponatremia (128 mmol/L, RI: 132–140), hypochloremia (80 mmol/L, RI: 95–103), hyperkalemia (5.2 mmol/L, RI: 2.6–4.7), hyperalbuminemia (3.4 g/dL, RI: 2.5–3.3), hyperglycemia (125 mg/dL, RI: 70–113) and hypercalcemia (14.4 mg/dL, RI: 11–13.4); free/ionized calcium was 1.53 mmol/L (RI: 1.09–1.67).

Cystoscopy revealed red filamentous material pooling in the urine (Figure 1A,B). The urine was isosthenuric (USG 1.010) and alkaline (pH 8.0) with 1+ protein and large blood. Unstained sediment contained 10–50 RBC/hpf, 10–20 WBC/hpf, many transitional epithelial cells, 0–5/lpf linear structures (Figure 1C), rare calcium carbonate crystals, and moderate mucus threads.

The minimum database findings were suggestive of inflammation/stress, dehydration, muscle injury, and renal injury/insufficiency. The presence of macroscopic urinary casts was striking and unique. In general, urinary casts are rare in herbivores due to alkalinuria.1 Cellular and granular casts are abnormal and indicate acute renal tubular injury. Cellular casts are defined by their cell composition: epithelial casts indicate renal tubular degeneration or necrosis secondary to severe dehydration, ischemia/infarction, nephrotoxicity, or pigment nephropathy; leukocyte casts imply tubulointerstitial inflammation (eg, pyelonephritis); and erythrocyte casts indicate intrarenal hemorrhage.1-3 Granular casts form from the degeneration of cellular casts. In this case, the granular-appearing casts were presumed to represent breakdown products/proteins from erythrocytes (hemoglobin) and muscle (myoglobin). Hemoglobin casts occur with intravascular hemolysis and renal hemorrhage, whereas myoglobin casts indicate severe muscle injury or necrosis.2, 3 These proteins can have a similar appearance on routine stains and can be delineated with Okajima stain (hemoglobin stains orange to orange-red) and myoglobin IHC (specific to myoglobin).

Endogenous injury from myoglobin or hemoglobin (pigment nephropathy) can result in renal tubular injury due to altered blood flow, cast formation, tubular obstruction, and oxidative injury.1-3 Given the history of a trail ride preceding the hyporexia and pigmenturia, moderately increased muscle enzyme activities, and positive immunoreactivity to myoglobin IHC, the horse likely developed pigment nephropathy from myoglobinuria, with secondary intraluminal erythrocytes and hemoglobin from renal hemorrhage and tubular necrosis. CK activity >1000 IU/L or 3–5 times the upper reference limit is often indicative of acute muscle necrosis.4, 5 Additionally, peak CK activity will occur 4–6 h after muscle injury.5 Therefore, the historical increase in muscle enzyme activity reported by the referring veterinarian 2 days after the onset of clinical signs suggests that the peak CK activity was likely much greater, supporting acute muscle ischemia/necrosis and subsequent myoglobinuria and myoglobin cast formation. Furthermore, this horse did not develop anemia throughout the entire clinical course, so causes of primary hemoglobinuric nephropathy (eg, immune-mediated hemolytic anemia, red maple leaf, or Allium species ingestion)1-3 were considered unlikely. Although only two doses of flunixin were given 24 h apart, the nephrotoxic potential would be greater if the horse had concurrent dehydration/hypovolemia and/or renal injury/insufficiency,1, 2 which may have contributed to the renal injury in this case.

Myoglobinuria may stem from exertional myopathies (eg, sporadic or recurrent exertional rhabdomyolysis, myofibrillar myopathy, polysaccharide storage myopathy), trauma, immune-mediated myopathies, malignant hyperthermia, clostridial myonecrosis, selenium deficiency, toxin (ionophore) ingestions, atypical myopathy/myoglobinuria, or even heat exhaustion.3-5 In this case, it is unknown if there was any prior history of tying-up episodes that may support an underlying primary myopathy. Arabians are included in the performance horses (along with Thoroughbreds and standardbreds) that can develop rhabdomyolysis without underlying myopathy.4, 5 Given the lack of gross muscle abnormalities in this case, these tissues were not collected at the time of necropsy, precluding a more definitive cause of myopathy.

In all, this case highlights the unique gross and microscopic morphology of pigment-containing casts in a horse with acute kidney injury presumed secondary to myopathy. These casts should not be overlooked as contaminants and should be included in the microscopic review, as they indicate renal pathology, and special stains can be used to differentiate hemoglobin and myoglobin pigments.

The authors have indicated that they have no affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in, or in financial competition with, the subject matter or materials discussed in this article.

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来源期刊
Veterinary clinical pathology
Veterinary clinical pathology 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
16.70%
发文量
133
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: Veterinary Clinical Pathology is the official journal of the American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology (ASVCP) and the European Society of Veterinary Clinical Pathology (ESVCP). The journal''s mission is to provide an international forum for communication and discussion of scientific investigations and new developments that advance the art and science of laboratory diagnosis in animals. Veterinary Clinical Pathology welcomes original experimental research and clinical contributions involving domestic, laboratory, avian, and wildlife species in the areas of hematology, hemostasis, immunopathology, clinical chemistry, cytopathology, surgical pathology, toxicology, endocrinology, laboratory and analytical techniques, instrumentation, quality assurance, and clinical pathology education.
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