Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Creatine, carnitine, and choline raise blood creatine in adult dogs
By Banton, Sydney et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Department of Animal Biosciences, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Addition of a combination of creatine, carnitine, and choline to a commercial diet increases postprandial plasma creatine and creatinine concentrations in adult dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of adult Beagles was fed a special diet that included a combination of creatine, carnitine, and choline to see how it affected their blood levels of creatine and creatinine after meals. The dogs showed significantly higher levels of creatine and creatinine in their blood after eating when compared to other diets. This suggests that adding these nutrients to their food can boost energy metabolism in dogs. If you're considering dietary changes for your dog, especially for energy levels, this combination might be worth discussing with your vet.
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Abstract
Creatine is a nitrogenous compound essential for cellular energy homeostasis found in animal protein; however, when heat-processed for pet food, creatine is degraded to creatinine, which is not metabolically active and excreted in urine. The objective of the present investigation was to define the postprandial plasma creatine and creatinine response in dogs fed a commercial diet (CON) formulated for adult dogs, top-dressed with a combination of creatine (9.6 g/kg dry matter, DM), carnitine (2.13 g/kg DM) and choline (0.24 g/kg DM; CCC), methionine (2.6 g/kg DM; MET), or taurine (0.7 g/kg DM; TAU). Eight adult Beagles were fed one of the four diets for 7 days in a Latin Square design with no washout period. On day 7, cephalic catheters were placed and blood samples were collected before being fed (fasted) and up to 6 h post-meal. Creatine and creatinine were analyzed using HPLC and data analyzed using PROC GLIMMIX in SAS. Plasma creatine concentrations were higher in dogs fed CCC (103 ± 10 μmol/L) compared to MET (72 ± 7 μmol/L) at fasted (< 0.05) and higher compared to all other treatments from 15 to 360 min post-meal (< 0.05). Plasma creatinine concentrations were higher in dogs fed CCC from 60 to 180 min compared to all other treatments. These data suggest that when creatine, carnitine and choline are top-dressed for 7 days, plasma creatine is rapidly absorbed and remains elevated up to 6 h post-meal. This may have implications for energy metabolism and should be considered when using creatinine as a diagnostic tool in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36504876/