Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Biomarkers to detect selenium levels in adult dogs
By van Zelst, Mariëlle et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2016·Department of Nutrition·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Biomarkers of selenium status in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 24 adult dogs was studied to see how their health was affected by different levels of selenium in their diet. Half of the dogs were fed a diet with enough selenium, while the other half received a diet low in selenium for eight weeks. The dogs on the low-selenium diet showed significant drops in certain health markers, like urinary selenium and serum selenium levels, indicating that low selenium could impact their health. This research suggests that monitoring these markers can help detect potential health issues related to selenium deficiency in dogs.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inadequate dietary selenium (Se) intake in humans and animals can lead to long term health problems, such as cancer. In view of the owner's desire for healthy longevity of companion animals, the impact of dietary Se provision on long term health effects warrants investigation. Little is currently known regards biomarkers, and rate of change of such biomarkers in relation to dietary selenium intake in dogs. In this study, selected biomarkers were assessed for their suitability to detect changes in dietary Se in adult dogs within eight weeks. RESULTS: Twenty-four dogs were fed a semi-purified diet with an adequate amount of Se (46.1 μg/MJ) over an 8 week period. They were then divided into two groups. The first group remained on the adequate Se diet, the second were offered a semi-purified diet with a low Se concentration (6.5 μg/MJ; 31% of the FEDIAF minimum) for 8 weeks. Weekly urine and blood was collected and hair growth measurements were performed. The urinary Se to creatinine ratio and serum Se concentration were significantly lower in dogs consuming the low Se diet from week 1 onwards, by 84% (adequate 25.3, low 4.1) and 7% (adequate 257 μg/L, low 238 μg/L) respectively. Serum and whole blood glutathione peroxidase were also significantly lower in dogs consuming the low Se diet from weeks 6 and 8 respectively. None of the other biomarkers (mRNA expression and serum copper, creatine kinase, triiodothyronine:thyroxine ratio and hair growth) responded significantly to the low Se diet over the 8 week period. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated that urinary Se to creatinine ratio, serum Se and serum and whole blood glutathione peroxidase can be used as biomarkers of selenium status in dogs. Urinary Se to creatinine ratio and serum Se concentrations responded faster to decreased dietary Se than the other parameters. This makes these biomarkers candidates for early screening of long term effects of dietary Se provision on canine health.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26785793/