Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Heart and blood pressure changes in ponies with metabolic syndrome
By Heliczer, Natalie et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2017·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cardiovascular findings in ponies with equine metabolic syndrome.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A group of ponies diagnosed with equine metabolic syndrome (EMS) showed signs of heart changes, including thicker heart walls, compared to healthy ponies. These ponies had a higher heart rate and their heart wall thickness was linked to insulin levels from a sugar test. While the study found some differences in heart function, it suggests that more research is needed to fully understand the cardiovascular issues related to EMS. If your pony has EMS, it may be worth discussing heart health with your veterinarian.
People also search for: pony equine metabolic syndrome symptoms · EMS pony heart problems · pony insulin resistance treatment
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine whether hypertension, high sympathetic tone, resting and exercising arrhythmias, and echocardiographic changes consistent with hypertensive cardiomyopathy were associated with equine metabolic syndrome (EMS) in ponies. DESIGN Prospective case-control study. ANIMALS 19 privately owned ponies with a diagnosis of EMS (history of laminitis, body condition score ≥ 7/9, cresty neck score ≥ 3/5, and abnormal oral sugar test result; cases) and 20 healthy control ponies. PROCEDURES Heart rate (HR), noninvasively measured arterial blood pressure (BP), markers of autonomic tone (splenic volume and HR variability), 24-hour and exercising ECGs, and echocardiograms were compared between cases and controls. RESULTS Compared with controls, cases had a higher mean ± SD HR (44.5 ± 7.5 beats/min vs 38.6 ± 6.8 beats/min) and median mean left ventricular wall thickness (2.0 cm vs 1.8 cm). No differences were identified between groups in BP, splenic volume, HR variability, and number of premature complexes in ECGs. Mean wall thickness was correlated with BP (r = 0.54), high-frequency power (r = -0.71), and ratio of low-to high-frequency power (ϕ = 0.66). Relative wall thickness was correlated with serum insulin concentration (r = 0.71). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Ponies with EMS had myocardial hypertrophy that was correlated with insulin response to an oral sugar test, sympathetic and parasympathetic tone, and BP. The heterogeneity and limited sample size of this preliminary study should be considered when drawing conclusions. Cardiovascular changes associated with this syndrome deserve further attention.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28414603/