2024 journal article
INVESTIGATION OF A POINT-OF-CARE VISCOELASTIC COAGULATION MONITOR AND ITS COMPARISON TO THROMBOELASTOGRAPHY IN CLINICALLY HEALTHY AFRICAN ELEPHANTS (<i>LOXODONTA AFRICANA</i>)
JOURNAL OF ZOO AND WILDLIFE MEDICINE, 55(1), 164–172.
Elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV) can induce fatal hemorrhagic disease (HD) in African elephants (Loxodonta africana). Once clinical signs develop, progression is rapid, even with aggressive treatment. There is a critical need to develop point-of-care diagnostic tests to aid in identification of EEHV-HD prior to the onset of overt clinical signs. Study objectives were to investigate a novel, point-of-care viscoelastic coagulation monitor (VCM Vet), compare the results to thromboelastography (TEG), and report traditional hemostatic analytes in adult African elephants. Whole blood was collected from seven clinically healthy elephants (four females and three males, 18–47 yr) and analyzed in duplicate via VCM Vet and kaolin-activated TEG 1–3 and 30 min following collection, respectively. Separated plasma was frozen for ancillary coagulation testing. Both analyses generated quantifiable clotting reactions with variables (median [range]) describing clot formation rate (VCM Vet, clot time = 682 s [530–987 s], clot formation time = 244 s [186–744 s], Alpha = 40° [14–47°]; TEG, reaction time = 6.2 min [3.7–11.8 min], kinetic time = 1.3 min [0.9–2.6 min], Alpha = 70° [57–77°]), clot strength (VCM Vet, maximum clot formation = 34 units [20–45 units]; TEG, maximum amplitude = 75 mm [69–80 mm], shear elastic modulus strength = 14.7 Kdynes/s [11.3–19.5 Kdynes/s]), and clot lysis (VCM Vet, lysis index at 30 min = 100% [100–99%], lysis index at 45 min = 98% [95–100%]; TEG, lysis index at 30 min = 0% [0–0.4%], lysis index at 60 min = 1.4% [0–2.6%]) recorded. Additional testing (median [range]) included D-dimer concentration (33 ng/ml [28–94 ng/ml]), prothrombin time (12.4 s [12.2–13.2 s]), activated partial thromboplastin time (17.2 s [14.2–18.8 s]), and fibrinogen concentration (297 [282–383] mg/dL). Tracings generated by VCM Vet and TEG were clinically similar, and there was visual agreement and minimal difference between quantitative variables for duplicate tests. VCM Vet is a promising, user-friendly tool for use in identification and management of coagulopathies in African elephants.