Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How glucosamine and activity affect gut bacteria in sled dogs
By Wang, Dong et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Department of Computer Science, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Analysis of the gut microbiome in sled dogs reveals glucosamine- and activity-related effects on gut microbial composition.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at the gut health of 24 sled dogs, specifically Alaskan and Inuit huskies, to see how glucosamine supplements and exercise affected their gut bacteria. The researchers found that dogs taking glucosamine had less diversity in their gut microbiome compared to those that weren't. This change was especially noticeable after the dogs exercised. While glucosamine is often given to help with joint issues, it seems to also impact gut health, particularly in active dogs.
People also search for: sled dog gut health · glucosamine effects on dogs · dog joint supplements and gut bacteria
Abstract
The composition of the microbiome influences many aspects of physiology and health, and can be altered by environmental factors, including diet and activity. Glucosamine is a dietary supplement often administered to address arthritic symptoms in humans, dogs, and other mammals. To investigate how gut microbial composition varies with glucosamine supplementation, we performed 16S rRNA sequence analysis of fecal samples from 24 Alaskan and Inuit huskies and used mixed effects models to investigate associations with activity, age, and additional factors. Glucosamine ingestion, age, activity, sex, and diet were correlated with differences in alpha-diversity, with diversity decreasing in dogs consuming glucosamine. Beta-diversity analysis revealed clustering of dogs based on glucosamine supplementation status. Glucosamine supplementation and exercise-related activity were associated with greater inter-individual pairwise distances. At the family level,andrelative abundances were lower in supplemented dogs when activity was accounted for. At the genus level,[],,, and an unclassified genus belonging to the same family as() all were lower in supplemented dogs, but only significantly so post-activity. Our findings suggest that glucosamine supplementation alters microbiome composition in sled dogs, particularly in the context of exercise-related activity.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38384960/