Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs

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Standard

Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs. / Nybroe, Stinna; Bjørnvad, Charlotte R.; Hansen, Camilla F.H.; Andersen, Tenna S.L.; Kieler, Ida N.

I: Animals, Bind 12, Nr. 22, 3192, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nybroe, S, Bjørnvad, CR, Hansen, CFH, Andersen, TSL & Kieler, IN 2022, 'Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs', Animals, bind 12, nr. 22, 3192. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12223192

APA

Nybroe, S., Bjørnvad, C. R., Hansen, C. F. H., Andersen, T. S. L., & Kieler, I. N. (2022). Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs. Animals, 12(22), [3192]. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12223192

Vancouver

Nybroe S, Bjørnvad CR, Hansen CFH, Andersen TSL, Kieler IN. Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs. Animals. 2022;12(22). 3192. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12223192

Author

Nybroe, Stinna ; Bjørnvad, Charlotte R. ; Hansen, Camilla F.H. ; Andersen, Tenna S.L. ; Kieler, Ida N. / Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs. I: Animals. 2022 ; Bind 12, Nr. 22.

Bibtex

@article{c903d399466c435a95513c24645fc8af,
title = "Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs",
abstract = "Acquired canine proximal renal tubulopathy (Fanconi syndrome) related to excessive ingestion of jerky treats has been recognized since 2007. This study aimed to improve knowledge about the syndrome{\textquoteright}s characteristics, especially long-term outcome. By reaching out to veterinarians and dog owners, dogs suspected of jerky induced Fanconi syndrome were identified. The dog{\textquoteright}s medical records were reviewed, and owners interviewed. Data was analyzed using linear mixed models (p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant) and descriptive statistics are reported. Thirty dogs, median body weight 6.8 (range 1.2–59) kg and age 6.5 (0.5–14) years, were enrolled as suspected cases based on history of jerkey ingestion and confirmed normoglycemic/hypoglycemic glycosuria. Clinical signs included polydipsia (23/30), polyuria (21/30), lethargy (19/30), weight loss (15/30), hyporexia (11/30), vomiting (7/30), diarrhea (7/30) and no clinical signs (2/30). Para-clinical findings included azotemia (6/28), hypophosphatemia (9/25), metabolic acidosis (3/8), hypokalemia (6/20), proteinuria (13/26), aminoaciduria (4/4), hematuria (22/29) and ketonuria (7/27). Clinical signs resolved in 22/28 within 11 (0.3–52) weeks and glycosuria resolved in 28/30 within 6.5 (1–31) weeks. There were no associations between serum creatinine and urea and the amount/duration of jerky ingestion. Serum symmetric dimethylarginine concentrations were only available for a few dogs, therefore no conclusion was achieved on a possible association with duration of jerky ingestion. Apart from a larger percentage of dogs achieving complete recovery, the current findings are in agreement with previous reports.",
keywords = "canine, Fanconi, glycosuria, jerky, proximal tubuli, renal tubulopathy",
author = "Stinna Nybroe and Bj{\o}rnvad, {Charlotte R.} and Hansen, {Camilla F.H.} and Andersen, {Tenna S.L.} and Kieler, {Ida N.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 by the authors.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.3390/ani12223192",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "Animals",
issn = "2076-2615",
publisher = "MDPI",
number = "22",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Outcome of Acquired Fanconi Syndrome Associated with Ingestion of Jerky Treats in 30 Dogs

AU - Nybroe, Stinna

AU - Bjørnvad, Charlotte R.

AU - Hansen, Camilla F.H.

AU - Andersen, Tenna S.L.

AU - Kieler, Ida N.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 by the authors.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Acquired canine proximal renal tubulopathy (Fanconi syndrome) related to excessive ingestion of jerky treats has been recognized since 2007. This study aimed to improve knowledge about the syndrome’s characteristics, especially long-term outcome. By reaching out to veterinarians and dog owners, dogs suspected of jerky induced Fanconi syndrome were identified. The dog’s medical records were reviewed, and owners interviewed. Data was analyzed using linear mixed models (p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant) and descriptive statistics are reported. Thirty dogs, median body weight 6.8 (range 1.2–59) kg and age 6.5 (0.5–14) years, were enrolled as suspected cases based on history of jerkey ingestion and confirmed normoglycemic/hypoglycemic glycosuria. Clinical signs included polydipsia (23/30), polyuria (21/30), lethargy (19/30), weight loss (15/30), hyporexia (11/30), vomiting (7/30), diarrhea (7/30) and no clinical signs (2/30). Para-clinical findings included azotemia (6/28), hypophosphatemia (9/25), metabolic acidosis (3/8), hypokalemia (6/20), proteinuria (13/26), aminoaciduria (4/4), hematuria (22/29) and ketonuria (7/27). Clinical signs resolved in 22/28 within 11 (0.3–52) weeks and glycosuria resolved in 28/30 within 6.5 (1–31) weeks. There were no associations between serum creatinine and urea and the amount/duration of jerky ingestion. Serum symmetric dimethylarginine concentrations were only available for a few dogs, therefore no conclusion was achieved on a possible association with duration of jerky ingestion. Apart from a larger percentage of dogs achieving complete recovery, the current findings are in agreement with previous reports.

AB - Acquired canine proximal renal tubulopathy (Fanconi syndrome) related to excessive ingestion of jerky treats has been recognized since 2007. This study aimed to improve knowledge about the syndrome’s characteristics, especially long-term outcome. By reaching out to veterinarians and dog owners, dogs suspected of jerky induced Fanconi syndrome were identified. The dog’s medical records were reviewed, and owners interviewed. Data was analyzed using linear mixed models (p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant) and descriptive statistics are reported. Thirty dogs, median body weight 6.8 (range 1.2–59) kg and age 6.5 (0.5–14) years, were enrolled as suspected cases based on history of jerkey ingestion and confirmed normoglycemic/hypoglycemic glycosuria. Clinical signs included polydipsia (23/30), polyuria (21/30), lethargy (19/30), weight loss (15/30), hyporexia (11/30), vomiting (7/30), diarrhea (7/30) and no clinical signs (2/30). Para-clinical findings included azotemia (6/28), hypophosphatemia (9/25), metabolic acidosis (3/8), hypokalemia (6/20), proteinuria (13/26), aminoaciduria (4/4), hematuria (22/29) and ketonuria (7/27). Clinical signs resolved in 22/28 within 11 (0.3–52) weeks and glycosuria resolved in 28/30 within 6.5 (1–31) weeks. There were no associations between serum creatinine and urea and the amount/duration of jerky ingestion. Serum symmetric dimethylarginine concentrations were only available for a few dogs, therefore no conclusion was achieved on a possible association with duration of jerky ingestion. Apart from a larger percentage of dogs achieving complete recovery, the current findings are in agreement with previous reports.

KW - canine

KW - Fanconi

KW - glycosuria

KW - jerky

KW - proximal tubuli

KW - renal tubulopathy

U2 - 10.3390/ani12223192

DO - 10.3390/ani12223192

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36428419

AN - SCOPUS:85142338501

VL - 12

JO - Animals

JF - Animals

SN - 2076-2615

IS - 22

M1 - 3192

ER -

ID: 327474261