Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Prednisone raises blood lactate levels in healthy Beagle dogs
By Boysen, S R et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2009·Department of Veterinary Clinical and Diagnostic Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effects of prednisone on blood lactate concentrations in healthy dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Twelve healthy adult Beagle dogs were given prednisone, a common steroid, to see how it affected their blood lactate levels. After two weeks of treatment, the dogs showed significantly higher blood lactate concentrations compared to a control group that didn't receive the medication. This increase was noted at both the four-day and two-week marks after starting prednisone. While the dogs were healthy, the rise in lactate levels could indicate a metabolic change that pet owners should be aware of if their dog is on this medication.
People also search for: prednisone side effects in dogs · dog blood lactate levels · Beagle prednisone treatment
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucocorticoids affect carbohydrate and lactate metabolism. HYPOTHESIS: Administration of prednisone to healthy dogs will result in clinically relevant hyperlactatemia. ANIMALS: Twelve healthy adult Beagle dogs. METHODS: Prospective, controlled experimental study. Twelve healthy adult Beagles were divided into 2 groups (3 of each sex per group). One group served as control. The other group received 2 treatments: low, 1 mg/kg prednisone PO q24h for 2 weeks; high, 4 mg/kg prednisone PO q24h for 2 weeks. A washout period of 6 weeks separated the treatments. Blood samples were drawn for whole blood lactate measurement on day (D) 0, D4, and D14 and measured in duplicate. RESULTS: Compared with the control group, low and high groups had significantly higher blood lactate concentrations at D4 and D14. There was no difference at D0. There was no effect of time within the control group. In the low and high groups, blood lactate concentration was increased at D4 and D14 versus D0. Blood lactate concentration was greater in the high group than the low group at D14 only. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Dogs treated with prednisone experience statistically significant increases in blood lactate concentrations, which can result in type B hyperlactatemia. In such cases, improving tissue perfusion, treatment for the commonest form of hyperlactatemia (type A) would be unnecessary.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19572915/