Cystinuria in Dogs and Cats: What Do We Know after Almost 200 Years?
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Etiopathogenesis of Cystinuria
2.1. COLA Transporter
2.2. Genetic Aspects
3. Cystine Urolithiasis
3.1. Solubility of Cystine in Urine
3.2. Prevalence of Cystine Urolithiasis
4. Diagnosis
4.1. Diagnosis of Cystine Urolithiasis
4.2. Diagnosis of Cystinuria
4.2.1. Urinalysis
4.2.2. Assessment of Aminoaciduria
4.2.3. Genetic Tests
5. Treatment and Prevention
5.1. Dietary Treatment
5.1.1. Protein
5.1.2. Sodium
5.1.3. Urinary pH
5.2. Medical Treatment
5.2.1. D-Penicillamine
5.2.2. 2-Merkaptopropionyl-glycine (Tiopronin)
5.2.3. Captopril
5.2.4. Bucillamine
5.3. Castration
5.4. Future Therapies
5.4.1. L-Cystine Dimethyl Ester and L-Cystine Methyl Ester (L-CDME and L-CME)
5.4.2. Alpha-Lipoic Acid
5.4.3. Selenium
5.4.4. Tolvaptan
6. Cystinuria in Cats
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Phenotype | Type I-A | Type II-A | Type II-B | Type III | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mode of inheritance | Autosomal recessive | Autosomal dominant | Autosomal dominant | Sex limited | |
Gene | SLC3A1 | SLC3A1 | SLC7A9 | Undetermined | |
Sex | Males and females | Males and females | Males and females | Intact adult males | |
Androgen dependence | No | No | No | Yes | |
COLA μmol/g creatinine * | homozygous | ≥8000 | ≥8000 | ≤4000 | |
heterozygous | ≤500 | ≥3000 | ≥700 | ||
Breeds | Newfoundland Landseer Labrador | Australian Cattle Dog | Miniature Pincher | Mastiff and related breeds Scottish Deerhound Irish Terrier |
Location | Author | Method of Analysis | Years | Total Number | Cystine Uroliths | Sex | Age | Breeds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
America | ||||||||
United States | Ling and Ruby (1986) [36] | quantitative | 1981–1984 | 813 | 21 (2.6%) | 20 males 1 female | ||
United States | Case et al. (1992) [37] | crystallography | 1981–1989 | 5375 | 107 (2.0%) | 106 males 1 female | mean 4.5 years | Australian Cattle Dog, Mastiff, English Bulldog |
United States | Osborne et al. (1999) [38] | quantitative including infrared spectroscopy | 1981–1997 | 77,191 | 760 (1%) a | |||
United States | Osborne et al. (2009) [39] | quantitative including infrared spectroscopy | 1981–2007 | 451,891 | 3 402 (0.8%) | |||
United States | Low et al. (2010) [40] | crystallography | 1985–2006 | 25,499 | 320 (1.3%) | 313 males 7 females | English Bulldog (OR 44.2), Newfoundland (OR 12.6), Dachshund (OR 7.6), Chihuahua (OR 5.6), Miniature Pinscher (OR 9.3), Welsh Corgi (OR 5.0) b | |
United States | Kopecny et al. (2021) [41] | quantitative | 2006–2018 | 10,444 | 279 (2.7%) | 273 males (192 intact males) 5 females | Mastiff (OR 52.7), Australian Cattle Dog (OR 30.8), Pitbull Terrier (OR 12.9), Rottweiler (OR 11.9), English Bulldog (OR 10.1), Bulldog (OR 9.1) c Females: Pitbull Terrier, crossbreed, Newfoundland | |
Canada | Houston et al. (2004) [42] | crystallography (+another quantitative methods) d | 1998–2003 | 16,647 | 59 (0.4%) | 58 males 1 female | mean in males 4.3 years Female–4 years old | English Bulldog, Newfoundland, Chihuahua, Rottweiler, Scottish Deerhound |
Canada | Houston and Moore (2009) [43] | crystallography (+ another quantitative methods) d | 1998–2008 | 40,637 | 115 (0.3%) e | |||
Canada | Houston et al. (2017) [44] | crystallography (+ another quantitative methods) d | 1998–2014 | 79,965 | 480 (0.6%) f | significantly more frequent in males | Scottish Deerhound, Whippet, Newfoundland | |
Mexico | Del Angel-Caraza et al. (2010) [45] | quantitative | 105 | 1 (1%) | male | 4–6 years | ||
Mexico | Mendoza-Lopez et al. (2019) [46] | quantitative | 195 | 0 | ||||
Europe | ||||||||
UK | White (1966) [47] | chemical methods | 1st series 1944 | 103 | 18 (18%) | males | Corgi, Dachshund | |
2nd series 1961–1966 | 737 | 114 (15.5%) | males | |||||
UK (Scotland) | Weaver (1970) [48] | chemical methods | 1961–1968 | 100 | 20 (20%) | males | mean 5.3 years | Basset Hound, Irish Terrier |
UK | Clark (1974) [49] | X-ray diffraction | 110 | 24 (22%) | males | 4.9 ± 2.03 years | ||
UK | Allen et al. (2008) [50] | quantitative g | 2002–2006 | 11,027 | 348 (3.2%) | 347 males 1 female | mean 73 months | Staffordshire Bull Terrier |
UK | Rogers et al. (2011) [51] | 2002–2010 | 5591 | 180 (3.2%) | males | |||
UK | Roe et al. (2012) [52] | quantitative g | 1997–2006 | 14,008 | 424 (3%) | more common in males | majority at the age 36–72 months | English bulldog (OR 60.88), Staffordshire Bull Terrier (OR 8.71), Rottweiler (OR 6.99), Jack Russel Terrier (OR 2.32) h |
Germany | Hesse (1990) [53] | 1731 | 387 (22.4%) | Dachshund, Munsterlander, Irish Terrier | ||||
Germany | Hesse et al. (2012) [54] | 1979–2007 | 15,494 | 1491 (9.9%) i | 1476 males 15 females | 6.0 ± 2.5 years | Dachshund, Dobermann Pinscher, Poodle, Cocker spaniel, Schnauzer, Yorkshire Terrier, Pekingese, Shih-tzu, Dalmatian | |
Germany | Hesse et al. (2016) [55] | 1979–2013 | 20,316 | 1760 (8.7%) | 1741 males 19 females | 5.9 ± 2.5 | ||
Germany | Breu et al. (2021) [56] | 2017–2019 | 2772 | 421 (15.2%) | Males: 324 intact, 61 castrated Females: 6 intact 4 castrated j | median 5 years | French Bulldogs, Bulldogs, Chihuahua, Dachshund | |
Spain | Escolar et al. (1990) [57] | 171 | 44 (26%) | males | ||||
Spain | Riesgo et al. (2018) [58] | quantitative g | 2004–2017 | 116 | 9 (7.8%) | males | 2–12 years | Basset Hound |
Spain and Portugal | Vrabelova et al. (2011) [59] | quantitative g | 2004–2006 | 2765 | 87 (3%) | 86 males 1 female | Bulldogs | |
Portugal | Tomé et al. (2007) [60] | quantitative g | 2004–2006 | 299 | 20 (6.7%) | |||
Czech Republic | Sosnar et al. (2005) [61] | infrared spectroscopy | 1997–2002 | 1366 | 77 (5.6%) | 45 males k | Dachshund Basset Hound | |
Czech Republic | Kučera and Kořistková (2017) [62] | infrared spectroscopy | 2003–2016 | 803 | 41 (5.1%) | |||
Romania | Mircean et al. (2006) [63] | infrared spectroscopy | 2005–2006 | 20 | 2 (10%) | males | ||
France | Blavier et al. (2012) [64] | infrared spectroscopy | 2007–2010 | 1131 | 42 (3.7%) | |||
France | Méric et al. (2020) [65] | 2054 | 183 (8.9%) | 182 males1 female | English Bulldog, American Staffordshire Terrier, French Bulldog, Staffordshire Bull Terriers, Dachshunds | |||
Hungary | Bende et al. (2015) [66] | infrared spectroscopy | 2001–2012 | 2543 | 108 (4.2%) | 96 males l | 58 ± 31.3 months | Basset Hound (OR 40.2), Bulldog (OR 18.6), Rottweiler (OR 13.9), Min. Pinscher (OR 12.7), Wirehaired Dachshund (OR 7.6), Dachshund (OR 6.5), Chihuahua (OR 4.8) m |
Switzerland | Brandenberger-Schenk et al. (2015) [67] | quantitative g | 2003–2009 | 490 | 17 (3%) | males | median 3.9 years (range 0.6–10.1) | English Bulldog |
Norway | Lund and Thoresen (2020) [68] | 2010–2019 | 684 | 97 (14.2%) n | Males: 91 intact, 2 castrated Females: 3 intact 1 castrated | |||
The Netherlands | Burggraaf et al. (2021) [69] | quantitative | 2014–2020 | 4369 | 601 (13.8%) | 593 males (455 intact, 138 neutered) 8 females (2 intact, 6 neutered) | American Staffordshire Terrier, Basset Hound, Chihuahua, English Bulldog, French Bulldog, Miniature Pinscher, Rottweiler, Dachshund, Yorkshire Terrier | |
Asia and Oceania | ||||||||
New Zealand | Jones et al. (1998) [70] | X-ray diffraction | 1993–1996 | 316 | 24 (7.6%) | |||
Thailand | Hunprasit et al. (2017) [71] | quantitative g | 2009–2015 | 8560 | 136 (1.6%) | 126 males 2 females o | 4.8 ± 2.4 | Chihuahua, French Bulldog, Shih-tzu, Miniature Pinscher |
Canine Breeds | ||
---|---|---|
Afghan | French Bulldog | Pug |
Akita Inu | German Braque | Puli |
Alaskan Malamute | Golden Retriever | Rat Terrier |
American Staffordshire Terrier | Great Dane | Rottweiler |
Australian Cattle Dog | Husky | Rough Collie |
Australian Shepherd Dog | Chihuahua | Saluki |
Australian Terrier | Irish Terrier | Samoyed |
Basenji | Jack Russel Terrier | Scottish Deerhound |
Basset Hound | Kromfohrländer | Scottish Terrier |
Bichon Frise | Labrador Retriever | Setter |
Border Collie | Landseer | Shetland Collie |
Borzoi | Lhasa Apso | Shetland Sheepdog |
Boxer | Maltese | Shih Tzu |
Brussels Griffon | Mastiff | Schnauzer |
Bull Mastiff | Miniature Pinscher | Silky Terrier |
Cairn Terrier | Miniature Poodle | Staffordshire Bull Terrier |
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel | Miniature Schnauzer | Staffordshire Terrier |
Cocker Spaniel | Munsterlander | Swedish Lapphund |
Dachshund | Newfoundland | Tibetian Spaniel |
Dalmatian | Old English Sheepdog | Welsh Corgi |
Dobermann | Pekingese | West Highland White Terrier |
Drever | Pitbull Terrier | Whippet |
English Bulldog | Pointer | Yorkshire Terrier |
Fox Terrier | Poodle |
Location | Author | Years | Total Number | Cystine Uroliths | Sex | Age | Breeds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
America | |||||||
United States | Osborne et al. (1984) [112] | 328 | 0 | ||||
United States | Osborne et al. (1996) [113] | 9481 | 26 (0.3%) | 17 males 6 females | 3.2 years (range 4 months–11 years) | DSH, DLH, Siamese, Korat | |
United States | Cannon et al. (2007) [114] | 1985–2004 | 5230 | 7 (0.1%) | 3 males 4 females | 4× DSH | |
United States | Osborne et al. (2009) [39] | 1981–2007 | 94,776 | 92 (0.1%) | |||
United States | Kopecny et al. (2021) [41] | 2005–2018 | 3940 | 2 (0.05%) | |||
Canada | Houston et al. (2003) [115] | 1998–2003 | 4866 uroliths 618 urethral plugs | 5 uroliths (0.1%) 1 plug (0.2%) | |||
Canada | Houston et al. (2009) [43] | 1998–2008 | 11,353 | 11 (0.1%) | |||
Canada | Houston et al. (2016) [116] | 1998–2014 | 21,426 | 20 (0.1%) | |||
Europe | |||||||
Spain | Escolar et al. (2003) [57] | 34 | 0 | ||||
Portugal | Tomé et al. (2007) [60] | 2004–2006 | 65 | 0 | |||
Switzerland | Schenk et al. (2010) [117] | 2002–2009 | 855 | 2 (0.2%) | |||
Spain | Riesgo et al. (2018) [58] | 2004–2017 | 21 | 0 | |||
The Netherlands | Burggraaf et al. (2021) [69] | 2014–2020 | 3497 | 4 (0.1%) | 3 males 1 female | ||
Asia and Oceania | |||||||
New Zealand | Jones et al. (1998) [70] | 1993–1996 | 53 | 0 | |||
Thailand | Hunprasit et al. (2019) [118] | 2010–2017 | 923 | 7 (0.8%) | 4 males 3 females | 6× DSH 1× Persian |
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Kovaříková, S.; Maršálek, P.; Vrbová, K. Cystinuria in Dogs and Cats: What Do We Know after Almost 200 Years? Animals 2021, 11, 2437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11082437
Kovaříková S, Maršálek P, Vrbová K. Cystinuria in Dogs and Cats: What Do We Know after Almost 200 Years? Animals. 2021; 11(8):2437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11082437
Chicago/Turabian StyleKovaříková, Simona, Petr Maršálek, and Kateřina Vrbová. 2021. "Cystinuria in Dogs and Cats: What Do We Know after Almost 200 Years?" Animals 11, no. 8: 2437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11082437
APA StyleKovaříková, S., Maršálek, P., & Vrbová, K. (2021). Cystinuria in Dogs and Cats: What Do We Know after Almost 200 Years? Animals, 11(8), 2437. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11082437