Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine (Mar 2023)

Acid‐base imbalances and the association of blood‐gas variables, electrolytes, and biochemical analytes with outcome in hospitalized calves undergoing abdominal surgery

  • Florian M. Trefz,
  • Corinna K. Lausch,
  • Anna Rieger,
  • Stine Giertzuch,
  • Annette Lorch,
  • Peter D. Constable

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16618
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 2
pp. 740 – 756

Abstract

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Abstract Background Surgical abdominal emergencies in calves are associated with a guarded prognosis and have the potential for complex metabolic derangements including acid‐base imbalances. Objectives To perform a comprehensive analysis of acid‐base status and to assess the prognostic relevance of preoperative clinicopathologic variables in calves undergoing abdominal surgery. Animals Hospital‐based study samples of 535 (dataset 1; DS1) and 83 calves (dataset 2; DS2). Methods Retrospective (DS1) and prospective (DS2) case series. Results In DS1, acidemia (pH 7.37) was present in 30.7% of calves. Plasma L‐lactate, chloride, and serum inorganic phosphorus concentration accounted for 51.9%, 11.6% and 9.4% of the variation of venous blood pH, respectively. Classification tree analysis indicated that a negative outcome (death or euthanasia during hospitalization) was associated with venous pO2 ≤33.6 mm Hg, anion gap >18.3 and >22.9 mEq/L, serum albumin concentration ≤36.5 and ≤29.4 g/L, serum urea concentration >4.4 mmol/L, and plasma ionized calcium concentration ≤1.26 mmol/L. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of this model was 0.85 (95% CI: 0.82‐0.89, P < .001) and the resulting sensitivity and specificity for the prediction of nonsurvival at the optimal probability cut‐point of 0.5 was 89.8% and 65.7%, respectively. In DS2 the model had a similar sensitivity and specificity of 90.5% and 70%, respectively. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Clinicopathologic imbalances and associated changes of acid‐base status are common in calves with surgical abdominal emergencies and have clinical utility for the prediction of a negative postoperative outcome.

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