Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Blood hormone differences in lean, overweight, and diabetic cats
By Zapata, Rizaldy C et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2017·Department of Production Animal Health, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Differential circulating concentrations of adipokines, glucagon and adropin in a clinical population of lean, overweight and diabetic cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of lean, overweight, and diabetic cats had their blood tested to understand how their body fat and diabetes affected certain substances in their blood. The study found that diabetic cats had higher levels of triglycerides and leptin, while having lower levels of adiponectin and adropin compared to overweight cats. After four weeks on a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet, both diabetic and overweight cats showed increased triglycerides. This suggests that managing weight and diet could be important for cats with diabetes.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dyslipidemia, dysregulated adipokine secretion and alteration in glucagon and adropin concentrations are important obesity-related factors in the pathophysiology of human Type 2 diabetes; however, their roles in the pathophysiology of feline diabetes mellitus are relatively unknown. Here, we determined the concentrations of circulating leptin, adiponectin, pro-inflammatory cytokines, glucagon, adropin, triglycerides, and cholesterol, in non-diabetic lean and overweight cats and newly diagnosed diabetic cats. Client-owned cats were recruited and assigned into 3 study groups: lean, overweight and diabetic. Fasting blood samples were analyzed in lean, overweight and diabetic cats at baseline and 4 weeks after consumption of high protein/low carbohydrate standardized diet. RESULTS: Serum concentrations of triglycerides were greater in diabetics at baseline and were increased in both diabetic and overweight cats at 4 weeks. Plasma leptin concentrations were greater in diabetic and overweight at baseline and 4 weeks, whereas adiponectin was lower in diabetics compared to lean and overweight cats at baseline and 4 weeks. Diabetics had greater baseline plasma glucagon concentrations compared to lean, lower adropin than overweight at 4 weeks, and lower IL-12 concentrations at 4 weeks than baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that feline obesity and diabetes mellitus are characterized by hypertriglyceridemia and hyperleptinemia; however, diabetic cats have significantly lower adiponectin and adropin compared to overweight cats. Thus, despite having similar body condition, overweight and diabetic cats have differential circulating concentrations of adiponectin and adropin.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28376869/