Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cardiotonic pills reduce platelet activity in dogs on high-fat diets
By Zhang, Lei et al.·Published in Blood coagulation & fibrinolysis : an international journal in haemostasis and thrombosis·2006·Department of Cardiology, China·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Inhibitory effects of cardiotonic pills on platelet function in dogs fed a high-fat diet.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 18 dogs fed a high-fat diet developed obesity and other metabolic issues, leading to increased platelet activity, which can cause blood clots. To address this, some dogs were given cardiotonic pills, while others received aspirin. Both treatments helped reduce the overactive platelets, but the cardiotonic pills were more effective in lowering platelet function and improving metabolic health. This suggests that cardiotonic pills could be a beneficial option for dogs with insulin resistance and related health problems.
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Abstract
Insulin resistance and the consequent metabolic disorders are associated with a state of platelet hyperactivity. Oxidative stress is responsible for the persistent platelet activation. We sought to study the inhibitory effect of cardiotonic pills, an oral herbal component, on platelet function in a dog model with insulin resistance induced by high-fat feeding. We fed 18 dogs with a high-fat diet and six dogs with normal chow as control for 6 months. Then, six dogs were fed with a high-fat diet and received additional aspirin (250 mg/day), and another six dogs received additional cardiotonic pills (1,000 mg/day) for 4 months. Time-course changes in metabolic parameters and platelet function were detected. After high-fat feeding for 6 months, 18 dogs developed a series of metabolic disorders including obesity, dyslipidemia, oxidative stress and insulin resistance. In addition, a platelet hyperactivity state, characterized by increased agonist (arachidonic acid, ADP and collagen) induced platelet aggregation, platelet expression of adhesion molecules (P-selectin and GP IIb/IIIa), and platelet intracellular calcium concentration, was indicated. Cardiotonic pills showed a significant antioxidative activity by presenting an increase in plasma superoxide dismutase and decrease in erythrocyte glutathione, as well as a lipid-lowering effect (decrease in both plasma cholesterol and triglyceride). Either aspirin or cardiotonic pills could significantly reverse the platelet hypersensitivity and hyperfunction. Compared with aspirin, cardiotonic pills showed a more exaggerated inhibitory effect on platelet function (a significantly decreased collagen-stimulated platelet aggregation, and expression of adhesion molecules). In conclusion, cardiotonic pills inhibited platelet hyperfunction in dogs with insulin resistance. This inhibitory effect may mainly be explained by antioxidative activity and metabolic control.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16651867/