Development of a reference interval for urinary ammonia‐to‐creatinine ratio in feline patients

Author:

Brown Eleanor E.1,Castro Rebecca A.1,Griffin Francesca C.1,Mandese Wendy W.1,Rooks Jenna K.1,Stone Amy E.1,Wuerz Julia A.1,Cooke Kirsten L.1,Specht Andrew J.1,Harris Autumn N.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Small Animal Clinical Science University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine Gainesville Florida USA

2. Division of Nephrology, Hypertension and Renal Transplantation University of Florida College of Medicine Gainesville Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDisruption of acid–base homeostasis can lead to many clinical problems. Ammonia excretion by the kidneys is critical to maintaining acid–base homeostasis through bicarbonate production. Measurement of ammonia excretion may help determine if the kidneys are properly functioning in maintaining acid–base balance. Reference intervals are essential tools for clinical decision‐making but do not currently exist for urinary ammonia‐to‐creatinine ratio (UACR) in feline patients.ObjectiveThis study aimed to generate a reference interval (RI) for UACR in healthy adult cats.MethodsThe study used samples from client‐owned adult healthy cats that presented to the University of Florida Primary Care and Dentistry service (n = 92). Physical examination, serum biochemistry, urinalysis, urine ammonia, and creatinine concentrations were measured. Cats were excluded if there were significant abnormalities in their urinalysis or biochemistry panel. The RI for UACR was calculated according to the recommendation of the American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology. The UACR was evaluated for correlation with serum bicarbonate, weight, age, and sex.ResultsThe RI for UACR was 3.4–20.7 with 90% confidence intervals for the lower and upper limits of (3.0–3.7) and (16.0–23.7), respectively. No significant correlation with age, sex, or weight was found. There was no discernable relationship between serum bicarbonate and UACR.ConclusionsEstablishing an RI for UACR in healthy adult cats will allow further studies to determine if changes in UACR are observed during specific disease states.

Funder

University of Florida

Publisher

Wiley

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