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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Lab tests for pancreatitis in healthy, obese, and diabetic cats

By Jørgensen, Freja K et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2025·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of laboratory findings indicating pancreatitis in healthy lean, obese, and diabetic cats.

Species:
cat
Appetite & weightCats

Plain-English summary

A study looked at 79 cats, including healthy, overweight, and diabetic ones, to see if their weight and health status affected their risk of pancreatitis, which is inflammation of the pancreas. The results showed that none of the healthy lean cats had signs of pancreatitis, but 20% of overweight cats and 45% of diabetic cats did. The researchers found that heavier cats were more likely to have higher levels of a specific enzyme (fPLI) linked to pancreatitis. This suggests that being overweight or diabetic may increase the risk of pancreatitis in cats.

People also search for: cat pancreatitis symptoms · overweight cat health risks · diabetic cat treatment options

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Obesity is a risk factor for diabetes mellitus, which commonly coexists with pancreatitis in cats. However, obesity has not previously been associated with pancreatitis in cats. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate factors affecting serum concentrations of pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity (fPLI), trypsin-like immunoreactivity (fTLI), cobalamin and folate in clinically healthy lean, overweight and obese, or diabetic cats. ANIMALS: Seventy-nine client-owned cats (27 healthy lean [LN, BCS 4-5/9], 30 healthy overweight and obese [OW, BCS 7-9/9], and 22 diabetic [DM]) were included. METHODS: Cross-sectional study. The cats underwent physical examination, and blood tests. Linear regression models compared differences in fPLI, fTLI, cobalamin, and folate concentrations. Fisher's exact test assessed the proportions of cats with fPLI and fTLI indicative of pancreatitis, and hypocobalaminemia. A random forest algorithm identified explanatory variables for cats having fPLI levels indicative of pancreatitis. RESULTS: No LN cats, while 6/30 (20%) of OW and 10/22 (45%) of DM cats had fPLI concentrations indicative of pancreatitis. Body condition score (P = .02) and body weight (P = .002) were positively associated with fPLI levels in LN and OW cats. Higher fPLI, and lower cobalamin concentrations were associated with higher age across groups. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Body condition score and body weight were associated with higher fPLI levels in nondiabetic cats. A larger proportion of OW and DM cats had fPLI concentrations indicative of pancreatitis compared to LN cats. Whether this indicates subclinical pancreatitis remains to be determined. Hypocobalaminemia was less frequent in OW compared to DM cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39545314/