Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How obesity and weight loss affect hunger hormones in Beagle dogs
By Jeusette, Isabelle C et al.·Published in Research in veterinary science·2005·Affinity-Petcare, Spain·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effects of chronic obesity and weight loss on plasma ghrelin and leptin concentrations in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 24 Beagle dogs, both lean and obese, were studied to understand how obesity and weight loss affect certain hormones related to hunger and metabolism. The obese dogs were put on a special high-protein, low-energy diet to help them lose weight. After they reached a healthy weight, their hormone levels were monitored for six months. The results showed that while the obese dogs had higher levels of leptin (which signals fullness) and lower levels of ghrelin (which signals hunger), weight loss led to changes in these hormone levels, indicating that these hormones play a role in how dogs manage their weight.
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Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate, in dogs, the effects of obesity and weight loss on plasma total ghrelin and leptin concentrations. Twenty-four Beagle dogs, 12 control lean and 12 obese dogs of both genders and aged between 1 and 9 years, were used for the experiments. Mean body weight was 12.7+/-0.7 kg for the lean group and 21.9+/-0.8 kg for the obese group. The trial was divided into three phases. During phase 1, all 24 Beagle dogs were fed a maintenance diet. During phase 2, the obese dogs were submitted to a weight loss protocol with a high protein-low energy diet. The weight loss protocol ended once dogs reached optimal body weight. During phase 3, the dogs that were submitted to the weight loss protocol were maintained at their optimal body weight for 6 months. Plasma total ghrelin, leptin, insulin and glucose concentrations were measured to evaluate the effects of obesity and weight loss on these parameters in dogs. Body weight, body condition score, thoracic and pelvic perimeters, and ingested food amounts were also recorded during the study. Obese dogs demonstrated a significant decrease in plasma ghrelin and a significant increase in plasma leptin and insulin concentrations when compared with control dogs. During weight loss, significant increases in plasma total ghrelin and glucose and significant decreases in plasma leptin and insulin were observed. The increase in plasma ghrelin concentrations seemed to be transient. Body weight and the morphometric parameters correlated positively with leptin concentrations and negatively with total ghrelin concentrations. These results suggest that ghrelin and leptin could play a role in dogs in the adaptation to a positive or negative energy balance, as observed in humans.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15924935/