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Canine serum C‐reactive protein as a quantitative marker of the inflammatory stimulus of aseptic elective soft tissue surgery
Author(s) -
KjelgaardHansen Mads,
Strom Henriette,
Mikkelsen Lars F.,
Eriksen Thomas,
Jensen Asger L.,
LuntangJensen Michael
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
veterinary clinical pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.537
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1939-165X
pISSN - 0275-6382
DOI - 10.1111/vcp.12063
Subject(s) - medicine , c reactive protein , aseptic processing , inflammation , inflammatory response , soft tissue , surgery , surrogate endpoint , gastroenterology
Background C‐reactive protein ( CRP ) is an established serum marker for the presence of systemic inflammation in dogs. Results from previous experimental and clinical studies suggest that CRP concentrations also quantitatively reflect the degree and progress of an inflammatory process, suggesting its use for inflammation monitoring. Objectives The objective was to investigate whether the canine CRP response in serum correlates with the amount of trauma and the consequent inflammatory response after 3 standard aseptic soft‐tissue surgical procedures in 3 groups of dogs. Methods A total of 24 client‐owned intact female dogs of various breeds were enrolled in a clinical study with random allocation into 2 surgical groups, for either conventional, open‐approach ovariohysterectomy ( OVH ; n = 14) or laparoscopic assisted OVH ( n = 10). In addition, a group of 8 male Beagles from a laboratory animal facility underwent vasectomy, serving as the third and mildest surgical trauma group. Serum CRP was measured pre‐ and at 4, 8, 12, 23, and 27 hours postsurgery. Cumulative concentration over time and point concentrations of CRP were correlated with the surgical trauma impact level. Results There was a significant surgery trauma‐related difference in cumulative CRP concentrations among the 3 groups, and also in the 12 hours postsurgery concentration. Conclusion The CRP response varied according to the degree of surgical trauma on 3 standardized levels, thus supporting the use of canine serum concentrations of CRP as an inflammatory activity indicator and monitoring marker.