Difference between revisions of "Blood Groups - Cat"
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− | + | Cats and dogs have very different blood grouping systems. Cats have an A-B blood group system and inherit blood types as a simple dominant trait where by A is dominant over B. | |
− | Cats and dogs have very different blood grouping systems. Cats have an A-B blood group system and inherit blood types as a simple dominant trait where A is dominant over B. | ||
− | + | Cat blood can be classed as Group A, B or AB. | |
− | Group A which can be either A/A or A/B is the most common blood type of domestic short and long haired cats in the UK | + | Group A which can be either A/A or A/B is the most common blood type of domestic short and long |
+ | haired cats in the UK. | ||
− | + | Group B which is always B/B is very common in Devon Rex, Persians, British Shorthair, Somali, Himalayan and Birman [[Feline Breeds - WikiNormals|breeds]]. | |
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− | Group A cats have low titres of anti-B antibodies | + | Rarely cats can also be group AB. |
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+ | Both the blood donor and recipient should always be blood typed prior to transfusion. This is especially important in cats due to the occurence of alloantibodies. | ||
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+ | Group A cats have low titres of anti-B antibodies. | ||
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+ | Group B have high titres of anti-A antibodies and giving Group B cats type A blood can result in a potentially fatal transfusion reaction. | ||
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Blood group incompatilibility in Cats | Blood group incompatilibility in Cats | ||
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! '''Donor Group''' | ! '''Donor Group''' | ||
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! '''Transfusion reaction''' | ! '''Transfusion reaction''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | |A | + | |'''A''' |
|A | |A | ||
|None | |None | ||
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− | |B | + | |'''B''' |
|B | |B | ||
|None | |None | ||
|- | |- | ||
|B | |B | ||
− | | | + | |Stress, exercise induced |
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|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | |'''Inflammatory''' |
− | | | + | |[[Gastritis, Acute|Gastritis]], [[Pancreatitis - Dog and Cat|Pancreatitis]] |
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|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | |'''Neoplastic''' |
− | | | + | |Adenocarcinoma, lymphosarcoma, leiomyoma, [[Gastrinoma|gastrinoma]], (Zollinger-Ellison syndrome), Mast cell Tumours. |
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|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | |'''Metabolic/endocrine''' |
− | | | + | |Hypoadrenocorticism, liver disease, [[Uraemia|uraemia]], [[Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation|Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)]], mastocytosis and hypergastrinaemia |
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[[Category:Transfusion Medicine]] | [[Category:Transfusion Medicine]] | ||
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Revision as of 12:29, 13 August 2010
This article is still under construction. |
Cats and dogs have very different blood grouping systems. Cats have an A-B blood group system and inherit blood types as a simple dominant trait where by A is dominant over B.
Cat blood can be classed as Group A, B or AB. Group A which can be either A/A or A/B is the most common blood type of domestic short and long haired cats in the UK.
Group B which is always B/B is very common in Devon Rex, Persians, British Shorthair, Somali, Himalayan and Birman breeds.
Rarely cats can also be group AB.
Both the blood donor and recipient should always be blood typed prior to transfusion. This is especially important in cats due to the occurence of alloantibodies.
Group A cats have low titres of anti-B antibodies.
Group B have high titres of anti-A antibodies and giving Group B cats type A blood can result in a potentially fatal transfusion reaction.
Blood group incompatilibility in Cats
Donor Group | Recipient group | Transfusion reaction |
---|---|---|
A | A | None |
B | B | None |
B | Stress, exercise induced | |
Inflammatory | Gastritis, Pancreatitis | |
Neoplastic | Adenocarcinoma, lymphosarcoma, leiomyoma, gastrinoma, (Zollinger-Ellison syndrome), Mast cell Tumours. | |
Metabolic/endocrine | Hypoadrenocorticism, liver disease, uraemia, Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC), mastocytosis and hypergastrinaemia |