Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Chromium supplement lowers blood sugar and improves glucose tolerance
By Appleton, D J et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2002·Companion Animal Sciences Department, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Dietary chromium tripicolinate supplementation reduces glucose concentrations and improves glucose tolerance in normal-weight cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of healthy, normal-weight cats were given different amounts of chromium in their diets to see if it would help with their blood sugar levels. After six weeks, the cats that received the highest doses of chromium showed lower glucose levels and improved glucose tolerance, meaning their bodies handled sugar better. However, there were no changes in insulin levels. This suggests that adding chromium to the diets of cats at risk for diabetes could be helpful, but more research is needed to confirm these benefits over a longer period.
People also search for: cat diabetes prevention · chromium for cats · how to improve cat glucose levels
Abstract
The effect of dietary chromium supplementation on glucose and insulin metabolism in healthy, non-obese cats was evaluated. Thirty-two cats were randomly divided into four groups and fed experimental diets consisting of a standard diet with 0 ppb (control), 150 ppb, 300 ppb, or 600 ppb added chromium as chromium tripicolinate. Intravenous glucose tolerance, insulin tolerance and insulin sensitivity tests with minimal model analysis were performed before and after 6 weeks of feeding the test diets. During the glucose tolerance test, glucose concentrations, area under the glucose concentration-time curve, and glucose half-life (300 ppb only), were significantly lower after the trial in cats supplemented with 300 ppb and 600 ppb chromium, compared with values before the trial. Fasting glucose concentrations measured on a different day in the biochemistry profile were also significantly lower after supplementation with 600 ppb chromium. There were no significant differences in insulin concentrations or indices in either the glucose or insulin tolerance tests following chromium supplementation, nor were there any differences between groups before or after the dietary trial.Importantly, this study has shown a small but significant, dose-dependent improvement in glucose tolerance in healthy, non-obese cats supplemented with dietary chromium. Further long-term studies are warranted to determine if the addition of chromium to feline diets is advantageous. Cats most likely to benefit are those with glucose intolerance and insulin resistance from lack of exercise, obesity and old age. Healthy cats at risk of glucose intolerance and diabetes from underlying low insulin sensitivity or genetic factors may also benefit from long-term chromium supplementation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11869052/