Goggs Robert, De Rosa Sage, Fletcher Daniel J
Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States.
Department of Clinical Studies, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Vet Sci. 2017 Aug 18;4:135. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2017.00135. eCollection 2017.
Electrolyte disorders have been individually associated with mortality in small populations of dogs and cats with specific conditions, but the associations and interactions between electrolyte disturbances and outcome have not been evaluated in a large, heterogeneous population. It was hypothesized that abnormalities of sodium, chloride, potassium, and calcium concentrations would be independently and proportionately associated with death from natural causes and with all-cause mortality in dogs. An electronic database containing 33,117 electrolyte profiles was constructed to retrospectively assess the association between disorders of sodium, potassium, corrected chloride, and ionized calcium concentrations with non-survival and with death excluding euthanasia by multivariable modeling. A second database containing 11,249 records was used to validate the models constructed from the first database. All four electrolytes assessed had non-linear U-shaped associations with case fatality rates, wherein concentrations clustered around the reference interval had the lowest case fatality rates, while progressively abnormal concentrations were associated with proportionately increased risk of non-survival (AUROC 0.624) or death (AUROC 0.678). Multivariable modeling suggested that these electrolyte disturbances were associated with non-survival and with death from natural causes independent of each other. This study suggests that measurement of electrolyte concentrations is an important component of the assessment of dogs in emergency rooms or intensive care units. Future studies should focus on confirming these associations in a prospective manner accounting for disease severity.
电解质紊乱已分别与患有特定疾病的少量犬猫群体的死亡率相关,但电解质紊乱与预后之间的关联和相互作用尚未在大型异质群体中进行评估。研究假设钠、氯、钾和钙浓度异常将分别与犬自然原因死亡及全因死亡率成比例相关。构建了一个包含33,117份电解质检测结果的电子数据库,通过多变量建模回顾性评估钠、钾、校正氯和离子钙浓度紊乱与非存活及排除安乐死的死亡之间的关联。使用另一个包含11,249条记录的数据库来验证从第一个数据库构建的模型。所评估的所有四种电解质与病死率均呈非线性U形关联,其中聚集在参考区间附近的浓度病死率最低,而浓度逐渐异常则与非存活(曲线下面积0.624)或死亡(曲线下面积0.678)风险成比例增加相关。多变量建模表明,这些电解质紊乱彼此独立地与非存活及自然原因死亡相关。本研究表明,测量电解质浓度是急诊室或重症监护病房对犬进行评估的重要组成部分。未来的研究应以前瞻性方式聚焦于在考虑疾病严重程度的情况下证实这些关联。