Relationship of age, sex, body weight, and hematologic and respiratory variables with airway reactivity in adult cats

Reinhard A. Hirt First Medical Clinic for Small Animals and Horses, Veterinary University of Vienna, A-1210 Vienna, Austria.

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Diana Dederichs First Medical Clinic for Small Animals and Horses, Veterinary University of Vienna, A-1210 Vienna, Austria.

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Alexandra Boehler Clinic of Radiology, Veterinary University of Vienna, A-1210 Vienna, Austria.

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Andrew M. Hoffman Department of Clinical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, Tufts University, North Grafton, MA 01536.

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 DVM, DVSc

Abstract

Objective—To evaluate the association between airway reactivity and age, sex, body weight, and radiographic findings in cats.

Animals—32 mature cats that constituted 2 age groups (17 young cats that were 1 to 2 years old and 15 old cats that were 12 to 13 years old).

Procedure—Cats were placed in the chamber of a barometric whole-body plethysmograph (volume, 38 L), and box pressure was measured at baseline and after aerosol administration of increasing concentrations of carbachol. Airway reactivity was assessed by monitoring increases in enhanced pause (PENH), a unitless variable that measures bronchoconstriction as derived from dose-response curves. The endpoint chosen was the provocative concentration of carbachol that increased PENH to 300% of the baseline value (PCPENH300).

Results—We did not find a correlation between PCPENH300 and sex, body weight, number of eosinophils, PENH before bronchoconstriction, respiratory frequency, tidal volume, or minute ventilation. Airway reactivity was significantly less in the old cats (mean ± SD PCPENH300, 0.578 ± 0.051%), compared with the value for the young cats (0.053 ± 0.006%). Radiographic patterns differed significantly between groups of cats; a greater proportion of old cats (12/15) had bronchointerstitial patterns, compared with the proportion of young cats (4/17).

Conclusion and Clinical Relevance—These data support the notion that age exerts a strong influence on airway reactivity in adult cats, and radiographic differences suggest that structural changes in older cats may contribute to this effect. These findings have important implications for interpretation of results of airway reactivity tests in cats. (Am J Vet Res 2003;64:26–31)

Abstract

Objective—To evaluate the association between airway reactivity and age, sex, body weight, and radiographic findings in cats.

Animals—32 mature cats that constituted 2 age groups (17 young cats that were 1 to 2 years old and 15 old cats that were 12 to 13 years old).

Procedure—Cats were placed in the chamber of a barometric whole-body plethysmograph (volume, 38 L), and box pressure was measured at baseline and after aerosol administration of increasing concentrations of carbachol. Airway reactivity was assessed by monitoring increases in enhanced pause (PENH), a unitless variable that measures bronchoconstriction as derived from dose-response curves. The endpoint chosen was the provocative concentration of carbachol that increased PENH to 300% of the baseline value (PCPENH300).

Results—We did not find a correlation between PCPENH300 and sex, body weight, number of eosinophils, PENH before bronchoconstriction, respiratory frequency, tidal volume, or minute ventilation. Airway reactivity was significantly less in the old cats (mean ± SD PCPENH300, 0.578 ± 0.051%), compared with the value for the young cats (0.053 ± 0.006%). Radiographic patterns differed significantly between groups of cats; a greater proportion of old cats (12/15) had bronchointerstitial patterns, compared with the proportion of young cats (4/17).

Conclusion and Clinical Relevance—These data support the notion that age exerts a strong influence on airway reactivity in adult cats, and radiographic differences suggest that structural changes in older cats may contribute to this effect. These findings have important implications for interpretation of results of airway reactivity tests in cats. (Am J Vet Res 2003;64:26–31)

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