Serum Free Cortisol Fraction in Healthy and Septic Neonatal Foals

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Abstract

Background: Relative cortisol insufficiency occurs in septic foals and impacts survival. Serum free (biologically available) cortisol concentration might be a better indicator of physiologic cortisol status than serum total cortisol concentration in foals. Hypotheses: In septic foals, (1) low free cortisol concentration correlates with disease severity and survival and (2) predicts disease severity and outcome better than total cortisol concentration. Animals: Fifty-one septic foals; 11 healthy foals; 6 healthy horses. Methods: In this prospective clinical study, foals meeting criteria for sepsis at admission were enrolled. University-owned animals served as healthy controls. Basal and cosyntropin-stimulated total cortisol concentration and percent free cortisol (% free cortisol) were determined by chemiluminescent immunoassay and ultrafiltration/ligand-binding methods, respectively. Group data were compared by ANOVA, Mann-Whitney U-tests, and receiver operator characteristic curves. Significance was set at P

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Hart, K. A., Barton, M. H., Ferguson, D. C., Berghaus, R., Slovis, N. M., Heusner, G. L., & Hurley, D. J. (2011). Serum Free Cortisol Fraction in Healthy and Septic Neonatal Foals. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 25(2), 345–355. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-1676.2010.0667.x

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