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Differential Diagnosis: Proteinuria in Cats
Barry Hedgespeth, BVSc, North Carolina State University
Karyn Harrell, DVM, DACVIM (SAIM), North Carolina State University
Following are differential diagnoses for cats presented with proteinuria.
Prerenal
Hemoglobinuria
Myoglobinuria
Light chain immunoglobulins (multiple myeloma, lymphoma)
Renal
Functional or physiologic
Congestive heart failure
Strenuous exercise
Fever
Seizure
Exposure to extreme temperatures
Glomerular
Infectious
Bacterial (eg, chronic bacterial infection, mycoplasmal polyarthritis, endocarditis)
Viral (eg, FIV, feline infectious peritonitis, FeLV)
Protozoal (eg, toxoplasmosis)
Fungal (eg, cryptococcosis, other systemic fungal infection)
Inflammatory
Acute pancreatitis
Cholangiohepatitis
Chronic progressive polyarthritis
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Other immune-mediated diseases
Neoplastic
Leukemia
Lymphoma
Mastocytosis
Miscellaneous
Acromegaly
Drug reactions
Diabetes mellitus
Corticosteroids (endogenous/spontaneous hyperadrenocorticism and exogenous)
Hyperthyroidism
Systemic hypertension
Familial
Membranous nephropathy
Amyloidosis (Abyssinian, Siamese)
Tubulointerstitial
Chronic kidney disease
Acute kidney injury
Toxins (eg, NSAIDs, acetaminophen, ethylene glycol, lilies [Lilium and Hemerocallis spp], heavy metal ingestion [eg, lead, mercury, arsenic, thallium], insect or snake bite)
Hypotension
Postrenal
Bacterial cystitis
Idiopathic cystitis/FLUTD
Urolithiasis
Neoplasia (eg, urothelial carcinoma, other)
Prostatitis (rare in cats)
Vaginitis
Pyometra