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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Growth hormone and IGF levels in dog intestines with chronic diarrhea

By Spichiger, A C et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary medicine. A, Physiology, pathology, clinical medicine·2005·Institute of Animal Genetics·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Abundance of mRNA of growth hormone receptor and insulin-like growth factors-1 and -2 in duodenal and colonic biopsies of dogs with chronic enteropathies*.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with chronic intestinal issues, such as food-responsive diarrhea and inflammatory bowel disease, had biopsies taken from their intestines before and after treatment. The researchers found that certain growth factors, which help repair the intestines, were present in higher amounts in these dogs compared to healthy dogs. After treatment, the dogs showed improvement in their clinical scores, indicating their symptoms were getting better. This suggests that the growth hormone receptor and insulin-like growth factors play a role in healing the gut in dogs with these conditions.

People also search for: dog chronic diarrhea treatment · inflammatory bowel disease in dogs · dog gut health supplements

Abstract

Repair processes of the inflamed intestine are very important for dissolution of chronic enteropathies (CE). Therefore, we examined the mRNA abundance of growth hormone receptor (GHR), insulin-like growth factors (IGF)-1 and -2 in duodenal and colonic biopsies of dogs with CE such as food-responsive diarrhoea (FRD) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) before and after treatment as compared with each other and healthy dogs. A clinical score (Canine IBD Activity Index = CIBDAI) was applied to judge the severity of CE. Biopsies of duodenum and colon from client-owned dogs with CE were sampled before (FRD(bef), n = 5; IBD(bef), n = 5) and after treatment (FRD(aft), n = 5; IBD(aft), n = 5). Intestinal control samples were available from a homogenous control population (n = 15; C). Intestinal samples were homogenized, total RNA was extracted, reverse transcribed and analysed by real-time polymerase chain reaction to measure mRNA levels of GHR, IGF-1 and IGF-2. Results were normalized with glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase as housekeeping gene. The CIBDAI decreased during the treatment period in FRD and IBD (P < 0.01). In duodenum, GHR mRNA levels were higher in all groups than in C (P < 0.001). Duodenal IGF-1 mRNA levels in FRD(aft) and IBD(aft) tended to be higher than in C (P < 0.1). The IGF-2 mRNA abundance in FRD(aft) was higher than in C (P < 0.05) in duodenum. In colon, mRNA levels of IGF-1 in IBD(aft) were higher than in FRD(aft) (P < 0.05) and levels differed between IBD(aft) and C (P < 0.05). In conclusion, mRNA levels of GHR, IGF-1 and IGF-2 in the gastrointestinal tract were increased during CE when compared with gastrointestinally healthy dogs. The data suggest that GHR, IGF-1 and IGF-2 are involved in gastrointestinal repair processes.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16300656/