Small Animal Clinic, University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Foundation, Bünteweg 9, D- 30559, Hannover, Germany.
BMC Vet Res. 2023 Jul 29;19(1):99. doi: 10.1186/s12917-023-03641-0.
The present study aimed to investigate possible influences of body weight and sex on adrenal gland size in endocrinologically healthy dogs. Possible factors influencing the adrenal size are discussed in relation to a universal upper reference value from the literature of 7.4 mm as the thickness in the caudal pole of the adrenal gland. The adrenal size was measured by computed tomography (CT) from 66 normal dogs of six different breeds (Labrador Retriever (n = 16), German Shepherd (n = 10), Boxer (n = 8), Beagle (n = 14), Dachshund (n = 6) and Jack Russell Terrier (n = 12); male n = 38 (thereof neutered n = 23), female n = 28 (thereof neutered n = 17)) based on volume quantification and linear measurements using the data processing software Amira. For interbreed comparability, a ratio consisting of the third root of adrenal volume to aortic diameter (Ratio volume-aorta, RVA) was introduced. Additionally, breed-related attenuation values in contrast-enhanced CT data sets were measured.
The measured volumes ranged from 0.34 to 1.93 cm for the right and from 0.39 to 2.23 cm for the left adrenal gland. The present study was able to demonstrate a body weight effect on the adrenal volume as well as on length and height. In terms of adrenal size, no significant differences between male and female, nor between intact and neutered dogs were obtained due to the RVA. In addition, for the weight classes, a breed independent threshold for dogs less (left 1.4; right gland 1.5) or more than 20 kg body weight (left 1.1; right gland 1.2) based on RVA was defined. Breed-related significant differences with respect to attenuation were determined only for the left adrenal gland, with lower attenuation values in large dog breeds.
The present study points out the importance of weight-related data when assessing CT data of the canine adrenal gland regarding volume, size and attenuation. The use of a universal reference value for the assessment of adrenal size appears unsuitable considering weight-related volume and linear measurements. Sex seems not to affect adrenal gland size.
本研究旨在探讨健康犬的体重和性别对肾上腺大小的可能影响。本文讨论了可能影响肾上腺大小的因素,并与文献中 7.4mm 作为肾上腺尾部厚度的通用上限值进行了比较。使用 Amira 数据处理软件,对 66 只来自 6 个不同品种(拉布拉多猎犬(n=16)、德国牧羊犬(n=10)、拳击犬(n=8)、比格犬(n=14)、腊肠犬(n=6)和杰克罗素梗(n=12))的正常犬进行了 CT 检查,测量了其肾上腺的大小。66 只犬中雄性 38 只(其中去势 23 只),雌性 28 只(其中去势 17 只)。基于体积定量和线性测量,使用数据处理软件 Amira 进行了测量。为了进行品种间的可比性,引入了由肾上腺体积的立方根与主动脉直径的比值(Ratio volume-aorta,RVA)组成的比值。此外,还测量了对比增强 CT 数据集的品种相关衰减值。
右肾上腺的测量体积范围为 0.34-1.93cm,左肾上腺的测量体积范围为 0.39-2.23cm。本研究表明,体重对肾上腺体积以及长度和高度有影响。由于 RVA,在雄性和雌性之间、未去势和去势犬之间,均未发现肾上腺大小有显著差异。此外,对于体重分级,根据 RVA,定义了一个基于体重的左肾上腺小于(左 1.4;右 1.5)或大于 20kg 体重的犬的品种独立阈值(左 1.1;右 1.2)。仅在左肾上腺确定了与品种相关的显著衰减差异,大型犬品种的衰减值较低。
本研究指出,在评估犬肾上腺 CT 数据的体积、大小和衰减时,体重相关数据非常重要。考虑到体重相关的体积和线性测量,使用通用参考值评估肾上腺大小似乎不合适。性别似乎不会影响肾上腺大小。