Pontiero Alessandra, Bulgarelli Cecilia, Ciuffoli Elena, Buzzurra Francesca, Villani Agnese, Troìa Roberta, Giunti Massimo
Department of Veterinary Medical Science, University of Bologna, Ozzano dell'Emilia, Italy.
Division of Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care, Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
J Feline Med Surg. 2025 Jan;27(1):1098612X241291295. doi: 10.1177/1098612X241291295.
The aim of the study was to evaluate the association between triage body temperature (BT) and outcome in cats presenting to the emergency department (ED).
A retrospective observational study was conducted on cats presented to the ED. BT, clinical diagnosis and outcome were recorded. BT was categorised as follows: normothermia (37.8-39.7°C); hyperthermia (⩾39.8°C); mild hypothermia (36.8-37.7°C); moderate hypothermia (35.6-36.7°C); severe hypothermia (33.1-35.5°C); and critical hypothermia (⩽33°C). Outcome in the ED was categorised as death, euthanasia, hospital admission and discharge. Outcome at hospital discharge was evaluated in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) was identified in patients. No-SIRS cats were divided into three disease categories (urinary system, cardiovascular and miscellanea) and SIRS cats into four categories (urinary system, cardiovascular, trauma and miscellanea). The presence of sepsis was evaluated. Non-parametric statistics were used.
A total of 1440 cats were included. The hospital mortality rate was 21.9%. Hypothermia in the ED was reported in 510 (35.4%) cats, normothermia in 849 (59%) cats and hyperthermia in 81 (5.6%) cats. In the ED, the median temperature in non-survivors (35.4°C, 95% confidence interval [CI] 34.6-36.3) was significantly lower than in survivors (38.2°C, 95% CI 38.1-38.3; <0.0001). The risk of non-survival in the ED was significantly higher in cats with a decreased BT, progressively increasing with the severity of hypothermia ( <0.0001). Furthermore, BT was significantly associated with a higher risk of mortality in the ICU ( <0.0001). A diagnosis of sepsis was associated with a high prevalence of hypothermia (79/124 cats, 63.7%) and a higher risk of non-survival (odds ratio [OR] 2.62, 95% CI 1.52-4.54; = 0.0006). The mortality risk significantly increased in SIRS cats with a cardiovascular disease (OR 8.27, 95% CI 4.09-16.68; <0.0001).
Hypothermia is common in cats at ED admission and is significantly associated with outcome. Triage hypothermia might identify patients with sepsis or SIRS complicated by comorbidities, such as cardiovascular and urinary diseases.
本研究旨在评估分诊时体温(BT)与就诊于急诊科(ED)的猫的预后之间的关联。
对就诊于急诊科的猫进行回顾性观察研究。记录BT、临床诊断和预后情况。BT分类如下:正常体温(37.8 - 39.7°C);体温过高(≥39.8°C);轻度体温过低(36.8 - 37.7°C);中度体温过低(35.6 - 36.7°C);重度体温过低(33.1 - 35.5°C);极重度体温过低(≤33°C)。急诊科的预后分为死亡、安乐死、住院和出院。对入住重症监护病房(ICU)的患者评估出院时的预后情况。确定患者是否存在全身炎症反应综合征(SIRS)。非SIRS猫分为三类疾病(泌尿系统、心血管系统和其他杂类),SIRS猫分为四类(泌尿系统、心血管系统、创伤和其他杂类)。评估脓毒症的存在情况。采用非参数统计方法。
共纳入1440只猫。医院死亡率为21.9%。急诊科报告体温过低的猫有510只(35.4%),正常体温的猫有849只(59%),体温过高的猫有81只(5.6%)。在急诊科,非存活猫的中位体温(35.4°C,95%置信区间[CI] 34.6 - 36.3)显著低于存活猫(38.2°C,95% CI 38.1 - 38.3;P < 0.0001)。体温降低的猫在急诊科非存活的风险显著更高,且随着体温过低的严重程度逐渐增加(P < 0.0001)。此外,BT与ICU中更高的死亡风险显著相关(P < 0.0001)。脓毒症的诊断与体温过低的高发生率相关(79/124只猫,63.7%)以及更高的非存活风险(优势比[OR] 2.62,95% CI 1.52 - 4.54;P = 0.000)。患有心血管疾病的SIRS猫的死亡风险显著增加(OR 8.27,95% CI 4.09 - 16.68;P < 0.0001)。
体温过低在急诊科收治的猫中很常见,且与预后显著相关。分诊时体温过低可能识别出患有脓毒症或伴有心血管和泌尿系统疾病等合并症的SIRS患者。