Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Standard

Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic. / Pihl, Tina Holberg; Scheepers, Elrien; Sanz, Macarena; Goddard, Amelia; Page, Patrick; Toft, Nils; Kjeldgaard-Hansen, Mads; Andersen, Pia Haubro; Jacobsen, Stine.

2013. Abstract from Annual Convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners , Nashville, United States.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pihl, TH, Scheepers, E, Sanz, M, Goddard, A, Page, P, Toft, N, Kjeldgaard-Hansen, M, Andersen, PH & Jacobsen, S 2013, 'Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic', Annual Convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners , Nashville, United States, 07/12/2013 - 11/12/2013. <http://www.cabi.org/cabdirect/FullTextPDF/2014/20143210506.pdf>

APA

Pihl, T. H., Scheepers, E., Sanz, M., Goddard, A., Page, P., Toft, N., Kjeldgaard-Hansen, M., Andersen, P. H., & Jacobsen, S. (2013). Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic. Abstract from Annual Convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners , Nashville, United States. http://www.cabi.org/cabdirect/FullTextPDF/2014/20143210506.pdf

Vancouver

Pihl TH, Scheepers E, Sanz M, Goddard A, Page P, Toft N et al. Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic. 2013. Abstract from Annual Convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners , Nashville, United States.

Author

Pihl, Tina Holberg ; Scheepers, Elrien ; Sanz, Macarena ; Goddard, Amelia ; Page, Patrick ; Toft, Nils ; Kjeldgaard-Hansen, Mads ; Andersen, Pia Haubro ; Jacobsen, Stine. / Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic. Abstract from Annual Convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners , Nashville, United States.2 p.

Bibtex

@conference{c5edc510f7584074a15510016e70df7f,
title = "Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic",
abstract = "Serum amyloid A (SAA) in serum was the biomarker which best improved the clinical assessment in differentiating infectious colic from surgical colic. Introduction:The objective of this study was to investigate the ability of the acute phase proteins (APPs); Serum amyloid A, haptoglobin and fibrinogen to differentiate between horses with infectious non-surgical colic and surgical colic. Materials & Methods:The performance of the APPs was evaluated individually and in combination with clinical examination, as wells as traditional biomarkers in blood (WCC, PCV, TPP, lactate) and peritoneal fluid (PF) (haemolysis, WCC, total protein).Admission data collected prospectively from 148 horses with severe colic in one hospital was used to construct multivariate logistic models to predict if a horse had an infectious non-surgical colic. The models were based on 1) clinical evaluation, 2) clinical and blood evaluation and 3) clinical, blood and PF evaluation. Each model was independently validated against admission data from 78 horses in another hospital.Results and Discussion:The variables included in the final {\textquoteleft}clinical model{\textquoteright} were: Lethargy, temperature increase from 38◦C, gastric reflux 5-10L and normal rectal findings. All variables except gastric reflux 5-10L, were positive predictors of infectious colic. Diagnostic specificity and sensitivity was 98% and 57% respectively. When SAA concentration in serum was added to the model based on clinical evaluation, the specificity and sensitivity improved to 98% and 64%, respectively. No additional blood or PF variables improved the model significantly. The models had a satisfying integrity and diagnostic performance when validated.  ",
author = "Pihl, {Tina Holberg} and Elrien Scheepers and Macarena Sanz and Amelia Goddard and Patrick Page and Nils Toft and Mads Kjeldgaard-Hansen and Andersen, {Pia Haubro} and Stine Jacobsen",
year = "2013",
month = dec,
language = "English",
note = "Annual Convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners , AAEP 2013 ; Conference date: 07-12-2013 Through 11-12-2013",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Acute phase proteins as diagnostic markers in horses with colic

AU - Pihl, Tina Holberg

AU - Scheepers, Elrien

AU - Sanz, Macarena

AU - Goddard, Amelia

AU - Page, Patrick

AU - Toft, Nils

AU - Kjeldgaard-Hansen, Mads

AU - Andersen, Pia Haubro

AU - Jacobsen, Stine

N1 - Conference code: 59

PY - 2013/12

Y1 - 2013/12

N2 - Serum amyloid A (SAA) in serum was the biomarker which best improved the clinical assessment in differentiating infectious colic from surgical colic. Introduction:The objective of this study was to investigate the ability of the acute phase proteins (APPs); Serum amyloid A, haptoglobin and fibrinogen to differentiate between horses with infectious non-surgical colic and surgical colic. Materials & Methods:The performance of the APPs was evaluated individually and in combination with clinical examination, as wells as traditional biomarkers in blood (WCC, PCV, TPP, lactate) and peritoneal fluid (PF) (haemolysis, WCC, total protein).Admission data collected prospectively from 148 horses with severe colic in one hospital was used to construct multivariate logistic models to predict if a horse had an infectious non-surgical colic. The models were based on 1) clinical evaluation, 2) clinical and blood evaluation and 3) clinical, blood and PF evaluation. Each model was independently validated against admission data from 78 horses in another hospital.Results and Discussion:The variables included in the final ‘clinical model’ were: Lethargy, temperature increase from 38◦C, gastric reflux 5-10L and normal rectal findings. All variables except gastric reflux 5-10L, were positive predictors of infectious colic. Diagnostic specificity and sensitivity was 98% and 57% respectively. When SAA concentration in serum was added to the model based on clinical evaluation, the specificity and sensitivity improved to 98% and 64%, respectively. No additional blood or PF variables improved the model significantly. The models had a satisfying integrity and diagnostic performance when validated.  

AB - Serum amyloid A (SAA) in serum was the biomarker which best improved the clinical assessment in differentiating infectious colic from surgical colic. Introduction:The objective of this study was to investigate the ability of the acute phase proteins (APPs); Serum amyloid A, haptoglobin and fibrinogen to differentiate between horses with infectious non-surgical colic and surgical colic. Materials & Methods:The performance of the APPs was evaluated individually and in combination with clinical examination, as wells as traditional biomarkers in blood (WCC, PCV, TPP, lactate) and peritoneal fluid (PF) (haemolysis, WCC, total protein).Admission data collected prospectively from 148 horses with severe colic in one hospital was used to construct multivariate logistic models to predict if a horse had an infectious non-surgical colic. The models were based on 1) clinical evaluation, 2) clinical and blood evaluation and 3) clinical, blood and PF evaluation. Each model was independently validated against admission data from 78 horses in another hospital.Results and Discussion:The variables included in the final ‘clinical model’ were: Lethargy, temperature increase from 38◦C, gastric reflux 5-10L and normal rectal findings. All variables except gastric reflux 5-10L, were positive predictors of infectious colic. Diagnostic specificity and sensitivity was 98% and 57% respectively. When SAA concentration in serum was added to the model based on clinical evaluation, the specificity and sensitivity improved to 98% and 64%, respectively. No additional blood or PF variables improved the model significantly. The models had a satisfying integrity and diagnostic performance when validated.  

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - Annual Convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners

Y2 - 7 December 2013 through 11 December 2013

ER -

ID: 120732368