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Vitiligo in a cow apparently associated with hepatosis
Authors: Thompson JPublication: New Zealand Veterinary Journal, Volume 46, Issue 4, pp 164, Aug 1998
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Animal type: Cattle, Livestock, Production animal, Ruminant
Subject Terms: Clinical pathology, Diagnostic procedures, Integument/skin/wool/hair/fur/feather, Liver/hepatic disease, Idiopathic disease, Inflammation, Trauma/injuries
Article class: Correspondence
Abstract: I am concerned with the claims about the interpretation of the clinical pathological results in a recent letter published in the New Zealand Veterinary Journal (Yeruham et al., 1998). The authors present serum biochemical values with which they claim to diagnose hepatosis. These values are only just outside the reference ranges, and do not in my opinion prove hepatosis. Reference ranges usually cover 95% of normal animals from a population. This means that 5% of normal animals will lie just outside the reference range, either above or below (Duncan et al., 1994). These animals will, however, be completely normal. The alterations in analytes quoted in this letter are so small that they may very well lie within these normal categories. The authors have measured serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) concentrations which are not useful for diagnosing large animal liver disease (Duncan et al., 1994). In fact, in cattle they may
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