
Lantana is found in the southern states and Utah.
|
Blood
chemistry results can be extremely helpful in zeroing in on medical problems,
but they often aren’t clear cut. One of the most common findings is elevation in
enzymes that could have come from the liver, but this doesn’t always mean the
horse has liver disease.
To
help you understand the results from the blood tests your veterinarian ordered,
we’ve included a list of liver-related tests commonly found on routine blood
chemistry screens and situations where they might be
abnormal.
GAMMA GLUTAMYL TRANSFERASE (GGT)
This
enzyme is the most specific for liver and also the most sensitive. However, GGT
may show mild-to-moderate elevations in horses receiving one or more drugs that
are processed by the liver without indicating any liver damage per se.
| Plants Toxic to the Liver |
|
 Senecio jacobaea (tansy ragwort) is found in many U.S. Regions.
A
variety of commonly found plants can be toxic to the liver, and liver disease in
grazing horses occurs with some regularity. However, many of these plants retain
their toxicity when dried and baled into hays. This is one important reason why
it’s wise never to feed hays containing unidentified plants/weeds. Some examples
are:
Senecio
jacobaea (tansy ragwort) – Pacific, Pacific
northwest,
Northeast, Great
Lakes
region
Crotalaria
(Rattlebox) – East of the Rockies,
New
Mexico,
Arizona,
Utah Trifolium
hybridum (Alsike clover) – Nationwide except Texas. Panicum
coloratum (Kleingrass) – Texas,
New
Mexico Lantana
– Southern states from coast to coast, plus Utah
Amsinckia
(Fiddleneck) – Several varieties nationwide, particularly in the Western half of
the country
Heliotropium
(various types) – Nationwide except Wisconsin,
Michigan
and Minnesota
This
list is not meant to be comprehensive. Plant-related liver toxicity is possible
anywhere. Information on distribution is from the USDA Plants Database
(http://plants.usda.gov/index.html). |
GGT
is also commonly mildly to moderately elevated in horses in hard work,
especially early in the conditioning period and/or if the horse does not have
adequate antioxidant reserves. Low-level toxin exposure (e.g., aflatoxins in
grains, a mold toxin) may also rev up GGT activity leading to higher blood
levels but without actual damage to the liver.
Horses
with poorly controlled Cushing’s disease or insulin resistance may also show
mild elevations, probably secondary to oxidative stress and/or impaired energy
generation in the liver cells.
To
distinguish between those scenarios and liver damage/disease, you need to
consider both how high the GGT is, and if other indicators of liver disease are
also present. Upper limits of normal for most labs are usually in the range of
40 to 60 IU. Elevations of up to 300 to 400 IU can be seen without changes in
any other liver function tests with exercise, drugs, or toxin exposures and
don’t necessarily indicate liver damage, although they should prompt a search
for the cause. Higher elevations accompanied by abnormal liver-related tests may
indicate liver damage.
ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE (ALP)
Often
called “alk phos,” this is another enzyme in high concentration in liver, but
also in spleen, intestinal tract, bone and lungs. If the elevation is from liver
disease, GGT will also be elevated to a similar or greater extent.
ALP
is normally elevated in young, growing horses and young horses at some stages of
training because it is involved in the formation and remodeling of bone.
Horses
on chronic corticosteroids (such as for allergies or lung disease), and horses
with high production of cortisol caused by uncontrolled Cushing’s syndrome may
also show elevations in ALP since corticosteroids can cause bone resorption.
Fractures and inflammatory conditions of bone (e.g., sesamoiditis) may cause
mild elevations. A typical upper lab limit for this enzyme is 250
IU.
ASPARTATE TRANSAMINASE (AST)
This
is another enzyme widely distributed throughout the body, but in highest levels
in liver and muscle. To distinguish between the two, it’s necessary to look for
elevations of other enzymes pointing to either muscle (CPK) or liver (GGT and
other liver function tests). If only AST and GGT are elevated, this doesn’t
distinguish between exercise or liver disease as a cause. Repeat testing,
including CPK, should be done close to a bout of exercise to look for abnormal
muscle enzymes. Upper limit is around 400 IU.
ALANINE TRANSAMINASE (ALT)
Elevations
in this enzyme are generally more specific for a liver problem than elevations
in AST. However, it takes more liver damage to see elevated ALT than elevated
GGT, and for this reason GGT is usually a more sensitive test. Expect both of
these enzymes to be elevated if there is significant liver disease. Typical upper limit is 25
IU.
| Case Histories |
|
Case:
25-year-old gelding with mild laminitis and muscle loss. Bloodwork:
CPK elevated to 200, GGT 180, ALP upper normal at 250. Interpretation:
On further questioning, owner also reported the horse was slow to shed the year
before and had to be clipped. ACTH testing confirmed Cushing’s disease. All
enzymes returned to normal 4 weeks after starting pergolide
treatment.
Case:
12-year-old gelding with history of not being interested in grain and gradual
loss of condition. Owner had been putting extra molasses on the grain to get him
to eat. Bloodwork:
GGT 550, ALP 300, AST and ALT upper normal. Interpretation:
Highest index of suspicion is for liver. Inspection of his grain, which had been
bought in large quantity, revealed it was several months past the expiration
date. Testing of the grain revealed low levels of aflatoxins. Six weeks after
stopping this grain, enzymes had returned to normal. |
LACTIC DEHYDROGENASE (LDH)
This
enzyme is present in all body tissues, particularly rich in liver and skeletal
muscle. Same precautions for distinguishing between muscle and liver as for AST.
Upper limit is around 450 IU.
BILIRUBIN
Bilirubin
is the breakdown product of hemoglobin and myoglobin, the oxygen carrying
proteins in the red blood cells and muscle cells. After being stripped of their
iron, these proteins are released into the blood as bilirubin. Bilirubin occurs
in two forms, conjugated (direct) and unconjugated (indirect). The unconjugated
form is the “raw” bilirubin that is taken up by the liver, processed to
conjugated and excreted in the bile. The total bilirubin level in the blood
usually runs less than 2.5 mg/dl, with most of this being indirect bilirubin.
Since
the liver is the organ responsible for processing bilirubin, elevations are to
be expected with liver disease. However, elevations can also occur if the horse
is off feed. During fasting, a combination of higher levels of fatty acids
released from fat stores for energy and lower liver cellular levels of available
glucose seem to combine to reduce how rapidly the liver clears bilirubin.
Bilirubin in a fasted horse may reach as high as 10 or 20, and be associated
with obvious yellowing of the eyes and gums, without there being any liver
disease.
Bilirubin
is also commonly elevated for a day or more after strenuous exercise, probably
as a combined result of some myoglobin leakage from muscle and exercise related
red blood cell destruction. Similarly, it may go up with tying up, other muscle
injuries, or anything that causes red blood cell destruction. Again, these
elevations in bilirubin are not related to liver disease.
If
only elevated bilirubin is found, the cause is not liver disease. As with all
other indicators of liver function, elevated bilirubin must be interpreted in
the context of all the test results, not as an isolated finding. Because it
takes fairly extensive damage to the liver to elevate bilirubin, you would
expect to see elevations in all the liver enzymes across the board, including
very high levels of GGT.
An
exception to this would be a horse whose liver is essentially nonfunctioning and
replaced by extensive scarring, in which case enzymes may be very low but
bilirubin extremely high. A horse in this condition would also have obvious
neurological disease because of back up of other toxin substances in the blood,
particularly ammonia. The horse would also have blood-clotting
abnormalities.
ALBUMIN
Albumin
is an important protein circulating in the blood. Its functions are to bind
various drugs and hormones, and to maintain the osmotic pressure of the blood in
a normal range. Albumin is manufactured in the liver and levels will drop with
severe liver disease, but this would be in a scenario of extensive liver disease
as just described under bilirubin. Other causes of low albumin are
malnutrition/starvation (low protein intakes) and loss of albumin through
intestinal tract disease such as malignancy or colitis.
Albumin
may also drop with extensive skin loss (e.g. burns), widespread skin disease
such as purpura hemorrhagica, loss in urine with advanced kidney disease or
during bodywide bacterial infections. Differentiating between these conditions,
all very serious, usually isn’t difficult.