cPLi & fPLi Blood Tests: Pancreatitis in Dogs and Cats Explained
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cPLi & fPLi Blood Tests: Pancreatitis in Dogs and Cats Explained 🧪🐶🐱
By Dr Duncan Houston
🔎 Quick Answer
cPLi (canine pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity) and fPLi (feline pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity) are the most specific blood tests for pancreatitis in dogs and cats. Elevated levels suggest pancreatic inflammation, but results must always be interpreted alongside clinical signs, imaging, and other tests.
Pancreatitis can be one of the most frustrating conditions in veterinary medicine.
It can be:
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obvious and severe
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vague and chronic
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or completely confusing
That is where cPLi and fPLi come in. They are some of the best tools we have to help answer the question:
👉 “Is the pancreas involved?”
🧠 What Are cPLi and fPLi?
These tests measure pancreatic lipase, an enzyme produced specifically by the pancreas.
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cPLi = canine pancreatic lipase
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fPLi = feline pancreatic lipase
When the pancreas becomes inflamed, it releases more of this enzyme into the bloodstream.
👉 More inflammation = higher levels (usually)
🩺 What Do These Tests Tell Us?
They help assess whether pancreatitis is likely.
In dogs
cPLi is very useful for:
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diagnosing acute pancreatitis
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supporting chronic pancreatitis diagnosis
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monitoring response to treatment
In cats
fPLi is especially important because:
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pancreatitis in cats is often subtle
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signs can be vague or non-specific
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routine blood tests may be normal
📊 Interpreting Results
🟢 Normal
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Pancreatitis unlikely
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Does not completely rule it out, especially mild or early cases
🟡 Borderline / Equivocal
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Could be early, mild, or resolving pancreatitis
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Needs repeat testing or correlation with clinical signs
🔴 Elevated
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Suggests pancreatitis
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Higher values increase suspicion
👉 Important:
This is not a yes/no test. It is a probability tool.
⚠️ What Can Affect Results?
This is where people get tripped up.
🧂 Kidney Disease
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Reduced clearance can increase PLi levels
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Especially relevant in cats
💧 Dehydration
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May concentrate values
🧠 Concurrent Disease
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Severe illness or inflammation elsewhere can influence results
🍖 Diet and Recent Feeding
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Less impact than older lipase tests
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But still worth considering in interpretation
⏱️ Timing
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Early pancreatitis may not show strong elevation yet
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Late or resolving cases may show decreasing levels
🐾 Clinical Signs Still Matter
You do not diagnose pancreatitis from a number alone.
Dogs may show:
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vomiting
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abdominal pain
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lethargy
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reduced appetite
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diarrhoea
Cats are trickier:
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lethargy
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reduced appetite
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weight loss
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subtle behavioural changes
Cats rarely read the textbook.
🔬 Other Pancreatitis Tests
cPLi and fPLi are not the only tools.
🧫 DGGR Lipase
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Widely used enzymatic test
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Faster and cheaper
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Less specific than PLi tests
🧪 Amylase & Lipase (Traditional)
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Older tests
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Poor specificity for pancreatitis
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Can be elevated for many reasons
👉 Not reliable on their own
🖥️ Ultrasound
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Looks at pancreatic structure
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Can show swelling, inflammation, fluid
Limitations:
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operator dependent
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may miss mild cases
🧾 Blood Work (General)
May show:
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inflammatory changes
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liver enzyme elevation
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electrolyte abnormalities
💉 Trypsin-like Immunoreactivity (TLI)
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More useful for exocrine pancreatic insufficiency
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Not a primary pancreatitis test
🧪 Snap vs Lab PLi Tests
🟡 SNAP test
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In-clinic
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Rapid screening
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Gives normal vs abnormal
🔬 Spec cPL / Spec fPL
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Lab-based
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Quantitative result
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More precise
👉 SNAP = screening
👉 Spec = confirmation and monitoring
⚖️ How Accurate Are cPLi and fPLi?
They are currently the best blood tests available for pancreatitis, but they are not perfect.
Strengths:
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High specificity
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Good sensitivity in moderate to severe disease
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More reliable than traditional lipase tests
Limitations:
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Can miss mild cases
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Can be affected by other conditions
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Cannot grade severity perfectly
👉 Always interpret with:
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clinical signs
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physical exam
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imaging
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history
🩺 Putting It All Together
Pancreatitis diagnosis is like solving a puzzle.
You use:
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history
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clinical signs
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physical exam
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blood work
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PLi testing
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imaging
No single test gives the full answer.
But cPLi and fPLi are often one of the most important pieces.
🚨 When to Test for Pancreatitis
Consider testing if your pet has:
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vomiting
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abdominal pain
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lethargy
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inappetence
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unexplained illness
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recurrent GI signs
In cats, even subtle changes can justify testing.
💬 Final Thoughts
cPLi and fPLi have significantly improved how we diagnose pancreatitis in dogs and cats.
They are:
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more specific
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more useful
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more practical
But they are still just one part of the picture.
The best outcomes come from combining:
👉 good clinical judgement
👉 appropriate testing
👉 early intervention
Because pancreatitis is one of those conditions where catching it early can make a big difference.
❓ FAQ
Can PLi tests confirm pancreatitis on their own?
No. They strongly support the diagnosis but must be interpreted with clinical findings.
Are they better than traditional lipase tests?
Yes. They are much more specific to the pancreas.
Can cats have normal blood work but still have pancreatitis?
Yes. This is very common, which is why fPLi is so useful.
Should I repeat the test?
Often yes, especially for borderline or monitoring cases.
If you are dealing with a possible pancreatitis case and want help interpreting results or deciding next steps, the ASK A VET™ app can help you break down the numbers and build a clear plan.